View allAll Photos Tagged alignment
We put #09 on the rack with The Alignment Guy after last week's BIR track day. Verifying all is still well.
Thanks Jeff.
Photo: Ryan Gates
Village de Vougeot (21 - Côte d'Or)
Diaporama (slideshow) "Clos de Vougeot" :
www.flickr.com/photos/pat21/sets/72157636240422033/show/
Website : www.fluidr.com/photos/pat21
picssr.com/photos/pat21?ref=user
"Copyright © – Patrick Bouchenard
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Tonights sunset from the Roselle, IL Metra commuter rail platform. A inbound to Chicago commuter train crests the hill West of downtown Roselle, while the sunset aligns on the tracks behind a water tower in Hanover Park, IL
Another old Wills cigarette card, this time showing the old fashioned way of correcting railway track alignment, no machines, no Hi-viz jackets, warning lamps or flags, just six men with iron bars and another man (a ganger) to guide them. The card reads:
Card No42, Railway Equipment
It may not be generally realised that a construction apparently so permanent and firm as a railway track is liable to move, but in some places rail creep does actually occur. The passage of trains along the rails tends to move them through the chairs in the same direction, and this creep occurs particularly on falling gradients and on curves. Anti-creep devices are therefore used to hold the rails back. When the track moves laterally the alignment has to be re-adjusted; in our picture men armed with bars may be seen levering or slewing the lines over, under the directions of a ganger.
Litz conductors and a very aggressive alignment of the Audio Technica OC9ML/II on the Technics SP-15 with Kenwood TA-71 Tonearm
YMMV. Faith, Anya and Spike move all over the map by the end of the series, but this is just what I personally see as their core beliefs. And I only chose the ones who embody the extremes of the alignments.
I could probably make another chart with just Willow.
Inspired by the nerds over at mightygodking.com/
Questions? Comments?
Shot on location as part of the photowalk series near Walpertsweiler, Germany. Post-processing done in Capture One 20.
Making sure the alignment on the fork is perfect *before* making the front rack and lowriders. That’s a mistake I made and learned from back in 2008 at a previous job. It all worked out then but I just made more work for myself. Trying to work smarter 10 years on. #alignment #fork #starrett #bicyclebuilding #chapmancycles
How I try to polar align my Skywatcher EQ6 pro mount during the day. I can't place the compass anywhere near the mount as it seems to have magnetic properties. The method seems to work quite well.
A pair of Macá Grande (Podiceps Major) was fishing while a Coipo was swimming heading his home. Everyone coexists pacefully.
So while we were up on the mountain to take pictures of the Matterhorn at sunrise etc., there was a short period of time between the moon setting and the sun rising where the Milky Way was visible. The mountains are lit with the last light of the moon setting behind me while the bright part at the bottom is the early shine of dawn.
This is a stack of 10 frames to reduce the noise of the ISO 3200, manually aligned for the sky part, stacked as is for the mountains. Both the sky and the mountains came from the same stack of 10 frames.
If you're interested in image stacking to reduce noise in Astro Photos, head over the the Lonely Speck, Ian Norman has some kick ass Astro Photo tutorials on his site.
www.lonelyspeck.com/milky-way-exposure-stacking-with-manu...
I'm building a virtual model of Ɍaillery's Super-Light Steam Bomber Mk. LXVIII, but it seems I'm missing a few subtle part rotations. The 4L bars in the back don't want to line up properly with the clips that should receive them.