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Bracket uses one of the 4 screws that hold the main spindle bearing cover to the headstock.
The bracket comes so close to the tumbler that I ground down the head of the cap screw a little to give it clearance.
I think this may be Alder Bracket Fungus (Inonotus radiatus) but I may well be wrong so would be happy to receive confirmation or be corrected. Shot in the Warwickshire Wildlife Trust Clowes Wood and New Fallings Coppice Reserve.
Side view of my new portable studio. Now I just need a Vagabond battery pack. Not practical, but very interesting.
Parts bandsawed to rough shape and pinned together so that machining the pair will make identical parts. In this shot the supports are upside down and I'm cleaning up the bandsaw cuts with a 3/4 in. endmill. These two faces will bolt to the electronics enclosure.
the new bracket on the left is a bit shorter to raise the light an inch. It has a double thickness at the upper hole where it bolts to the canti brake stud. I just used a second bit of the aluminum extrusion and JB Weld'ed it in place.
Several layers and outcrops of bracket fungus which rots the core of a tree eventually causing its collapse.
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That's the hammer I picked up for tapping things to true on the mini mill. It has a heavy metal middle, and plasticy orange ends. Here I tamp down the bracket onto the shelf's front raised ridge.
Bottom bracket mitre cut, there's still a little hand work to finish the mitre and to clean it up, but thats the bulk done
Noticed first one, then another, then realised this old tree stump had large brackets all around it, some with 3 or 4 layers.
Another bit of tree for chopping. This bracket fungus has suddenly appeared. Love the pattern on the wood too.
Nadax Bottom Bracket with 113 axle for BSA threading. It's fittig for Shimano Crane and Dura ACE Crank
Saw lots of these large brackets on ash trees. Velvety on top, paler underneath, although wen they get older, they turn dark all over.
I spent just over an hour hoping to see a white-letter hairstreak down low but in fact did not see a single butterfly till I was leaving the wood.
The size of this fungi is the thing that made it my only photo that day.
Burlington, Vermont USA • Partial view from the west side of Elmwood Avenue to an elaborate bracketed gable.
☞ 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).
Bracket fungi, or shelf fungi, are among the many groups of fungi that comprise the phylum Basidiomycota. Characteristically, they produce shelf- or bracket-shaped fruiting bodies called conks that lie in a close planar grouping of separate or interconnected horizontal rows. Brackets can range from only a single row of a few caps, to dozens of rows of caps that can weigh several hundred pounds. They are mainly found on trees (living and dead) and coarse woody debris, and may resemble mushrooms. Some form annual fruiting bodies while others are perennial and grow larger year after year. Bracket fungi are typically tough and sturdy and produce their spores, called basidiospores, within the pores that typically make up the undersurface.