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Don't have a bracket for my 3.5 inch SSD drive, so its currently just sitting on the floor outside the box ;)
GANG OF FIVE: THE AUTUMN WALK, SEPTEMBER 2010 (23 of 41).
Giant polypore, Meripilus giganteus (Pers.) P. Karst (identified by Richard), parasitic on an old oak tree along Cowslip Lane, seen as we approached Mickleham, Surrey. (Sorry - we didn't note the oak species, but in southern England, the pendunculate oak (Quercus robur) is the common one.)
Further notes about the Gang and this walk: www.flickr.com/photos/brize/sets/72157626158179926/with/5...
ID: DSC_0024.JPG - Version 2
In order to perfect the fit further and set the face of the unit further back along with the shafts, we modded the brackets with 2 holes in each to get the perfect fit, again, no other radio can do this---- It's redundant to keep mentioning this, but it is totally the truth, and it's patent pending too!!!!
This tool is designed for older bottom brackets. You thread it into one side and then use a large wrench to tighten the tool against the stuborn bottom bracket race, then turn and it should spin out. Most older bb's are hard to remove and the tools for getting them out are sub-par. Made in USA, 110.00 shipped. www.atomiccycles.com
Burlington, Vermont USA • Architectural repetitions along the commercial blocks on the north side of Main Street.
☞ Part of a series of photos documenting my new home & neighborhood, in the heart of Vermont's largest town: Burlington 05401. • After almost a dozen years in rural Cornwall, 40 miles to the south, I have moved to one of the true outposts of optimism, on the eastern shore of Lake Champlain (the 6th Great Lake).
This decomposed bracket shows the internal supporting structure. The side viewed is the bottom where i suspect the spores would fall from the pores.
2 1/2 wide 1/2 inX 2 1/8 stand off
the rivots are 7/8 near the edge and two inches apart all mountings 1/4 rivot and bolts.
2 1/2 in black band
3 1/2 1/16 yellow band
8in 2/16 yellow band
4 in tapering down to 3 3/8.
This bracket is used for wood or metal blades. on dwarfs.
Hole drilled, easy as that. You can see the X reflecting in the other side of the bracket, where the other will be in a moment. These are offset by weird distances, as the screws weren't matched up on the board - they followed the contour. The silly putty made it much easier for me to align their bizarrely angled locations. You can still see the silly putty oil around the drilled hole.
Toncontin, (Atlantida), 5-feb-2014, Macro of the gills on the underside of some Bracket Fungi that were growing on a small log in a woodpile. The cap is normally up, but in the case the log had been moved and the gills were now facing upwards. This is a stacked photo made of of 11 shots that were each manually focused with camera on tripod and then combined to give focus from the hairs to the base of the fungi. Settings:
Camera Nikon D200
Exposure 1.6
Aperture f/18.0
Focal Length 60 mm (60mm f/2.8G Micro lens)
ISO Speed 100
Saw these unusual bracket fungi growing on an old tree branch - I have never seen this species before and wondered if anyone knows their name
Mystery of the Tower
Foxburst Farm Water Tower AKA “Vulture Tower” “Tower of Death”
In close proximity to the site of the Little House stands "an enormous square-sided water tower and adjacent one-story building projecting horizontally from its north elevation." (As described in a July, 2002 report from the Cultural Resource Consulting Group about the property.) The study goes on to say that the water tower and attached farm building "are an eclectic combination of styles that include "Italianate, Federalist and Craftsman. Referencing a New England lighthouse with its obelisk form and wooden clapboard siding, the windowed tower is crowned by Italianate brackets (that) support a flat, overhanging eave that holds a smaller box-like windowed structure which provides the base for a 1 1/2 story, Federalist-inspired clapboard cabin-like shell that was meant to hide the water tank at the top of the tower."
Hacienda Guachipelin, Rincon de la Vieja, Guanacaste, Costa Rica.
Parque Nacional Rincon de la Vieja. This was montane forest ... drier than rainforest.
This photo is licensed under a Creative Commons license. If you use this photo within the terms of the license or make special arrangements to use the photo, please list the photo credit as Joel Mark Witt | FolkMedia.org and link the credit to www.FolkMedia.org.