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9shooter camera bracket for connecting DSLR stills camera and hd video camera, for shooting stills and video at the same time.
(See notes) This bracket is not difficult to make and costs very little. You need a strip of mild steel 2.5 cm wide, 1.5 mm thick and c 40 cm long, another identical but much shorter piece, a tripod base plate, a 1/4" thread camera screw and some black tape. Holes require an electric drill, right angle bends in steel can be made using a vice. Ebay a good place for the steel itself.
bracket on board. You are allowed to use this image on your website. If you do, please link back to my site as the source: creditscoregeek.com/
Example: Photo by Credit Score Blog
Thank you!
Mike Cohen
Title: Bracket Clock
Artist: Movement attributed to Thomas Pearsall and Effingham Embree
Date: c. 1784-1795
Acquisition Date: 1974
Bruce White for the White House Historical Association.
9shooter camera bracket for connecting DSLR stills camera and hd video camera, for shooting stills and video at the same time.
9shooter camera bracket for connecting DSLR stills camera and hd video camera, for shooting stills and video at the same time.
AT&T logo || taken September 19, 2018 with Canon EOS 5D Mark IV and EF70-200mm f/2.8L IS II USM at 142, ¹⁄₂₀₀ sec at f/2.8 with ‒ 2 EV, ISO 640 || Copyright 2018 Stephen Shankland/CNET
The bracket allows adjustment of the angle of the monitor and also allows it to slide front-to-back. If I were to design it over, I think I would have added a depth adjustment of some sort.
Hozan Lock Ring Tool in action. While the original tool probably works great, mine has been worn out for the most part. DO NOT mess around with punches trying to hammer on the parts to remove them as you will really mess them up unless the gods are smiling upon you that day. Using a real lock ring tool of whatever brand will allow you to get a good crip on the bottom bracket cup. Use this on both sides of the bottom bracket for removal and installation. (Show without crank for reference as crank will not pass through with cups already in place)
9shooter camera bracket for connecting DSLR stills camera and hd video camera, for shooting stills and video at the same time.
Type 306 stainless rods, nuts, hex cap screws, and washers. Aluminum bar stock to secure the battery.
Photo of Drive side Cone in place with Chainring. This one was not budging, but it was in great shape so I saw no need to remove. Clean well and prepare for assembly. swap some good grade grease on the cone and the crank shaft
These spacer cable pole brackets were used in the section of my neighborhood built in 1962-63. They must have been the type used after the hook style in the 1950s I posted a shot of earlier this week.
Bracket Fungus (species?).
Joan and Scott Holt Paradise Pond. September 19, 2021.
Port Aransas, Nueches County, Texas.
Nikon D7500. AF-P Nikkor 70-300mm f/4.5-5.6E ED VR.
(300mm) f/5.6 @ 1/250 sec. ISO 1250.
Fomes fomentarius (L.) Fr., syn.: Pyropolyporus fomentarius (L.) Teng, Ungulina fomentaria (L.) Pat., Polyporus fomentarius (L.) Fr.
Tinder Bracket, Tinder conk, Amadou, Horse's hoof, DE: Zünderschwamm
Slo.: kresilna goba
Dat.: Oct. 20. 2017
Lat.: 46.36242 Long.: 13.69997
Code: Bot_1094/2017_DSC03421
Habitat: steep mountain slope, south aspect; mixed wood, Fagus sylvatica, Picea abies, Fraxinus ornus and Ostrya carpinifolia dominant trees; calcareous ground; relatively warm and dry place; average precipitations ~ 3.000 mm/year, average temperature 7-9 deg C, elevation 685 m (2.250 feet), alpine phytogeographical region.
Substratum: dead, still standing Fagus sylvatica.
Place: Lower Trenta valley, right bank of river Soča; between villages Soča and Trenta; Pod Stemerico place, above Trenta 2b cottage, East Julian Alps, Posočje, Slovenia EC.
Comments: Fomes fomentarius is probably the most common and easy to spot Polyporaceae in the Trenta valley and surrounding valleys. Only Fomitopsis pinicola living on dead Picea abies is eventually more frequent and also more noticeable with its orange-red rim of the pilei. This is so because deteriorated and rotten Picea abies trees and trunks are in abundance here. Namely, Picea abies is not really a 'suitable' species for this habitat and climate and hardly thrives bountifully in this region. Also, many trees now grow on former pastures, now abandoned for decades, which were covered with only a very thin layer of soil. Combined with their shallow root system they are almost regularly toppled by strong winds when they become a few decades old. Presence of many dead Picea abies trunks here around is a stage of natural forest succession process. This conifer is gradually replaced by Fagus sylvatica trees, which is a species truly 'at home' in Trenta valley.
Fomes fomentarius is mostly easy to recognize as such when it has its typical pileate or hoof-shaped habit. Although, it many cases it looks quite different from most pictures in the books. The habit depends on substratum, position on it and particularly on the age of the sporocarps. When young they are like a roundish 'blobs' of whitish, grayish or yellowish-ocher color, without a pore layer. In the first year pilei are brownish or yellowish, sometimes of reddish tint (ref.: 6) and becoming zonate on upper side. After the first year hard crust develops on the upper sterile side of sporocarps, which becomes gray to brown, and deeply zonate. When old they frequently become hoof-shaped, but other, often bizarre, shapes are also possible. If moist the old sporocarps may look totally black and are frequently difficult to distinguish from old Fomitopsis pinicola pilei.
The most characteristic traits of mature Fomes fomentarius are: hard crust on the upper, sterile surface of basidiocarp, and particularly a granular, roundish, dark brown core next to the substratum (seen only in cross section of the sporocarp; a good distinguishing characteristics against sometimes very similar Ganoderma species (Ref:3)), pores with thick tomentose dissepiments and yellowish brown fibrous context. Tube layer is more or less stratified and filled with white mycelium when old. Stratification is often weak (Ref.8.even states: non-stratified tube layer). Basidiocarps are consistently fertile only early in the spring, so there was no spore print with this find.
This species is culturally very important. It was found already with 5.500 years old find of frozen body of Ötzi, also called "iceman", high in the Alps. He had a piece of Fomes fomentarius sporocarp with him. In men's history the sporocarps had been used as tinder for making and transporting fires for millennia.
The sporocarps on the pictures were found on an old, dead Fagus sylvatica tree. There were more than 35 pilei present, from young ones to very old ones. The largest is 37 cm wide, 34 cm high and 22 cm thick! The tree has 2.2 m circumference at about half a meter from ground. SP none.
Herbarium: Mycotheca and lichen herbarium (LJU-Li) of Slovenian Forestry Institute, Večna pot 2, Ljubljana, Index Herbariorum LJF
Ref.:
(1) R. Phillips, Mushrooms, Macmillan (2006), p 307.
(2) L. Ryvarden, R.L. Gilbertson, European Polypores, Part 1., Synopsis Fungorum 7., Fungiflora A/S (1993), p 254.
(3) L. Ryvarden, R.L. I. Melo, Potoid fungi of Europe, Gilbertson, European Polypores, Part 1., Synopsis Fungorum 31., Fungiflora (2014 ), p 178.
(4) J. Breitenbach, F. Kraenzlin, Eds., Fungi of Switzerland, Vol.2. Verlag Mykologia (1986), p 306.
(5) G.J. Krieglsteiner (Hrsg.), Die Grosspilze Baden-Württembergs, Band 1., Ulmer (2000), p 519.
(6) A. Bernicchia, Polyporaceaes l., Fungi Europaei, Vol. 10., Edizioni Candusso (2005), p 215.
(7) J. Ginns, Polypores of British Columbia, Crown Publ., Technical Report 104 (2017), p 88.
(8) D. Arora, Mushrooms Demystified, Ten Speed Press, Berkeley (1986), p 581.
A Trans-Pennine class 185 passes underneath Ulverston's bracketed no.2 Up home signal with a Barrow to Manchester Airport service on 19th April 2018.
The units no longer run on this stretch of line, the route having been handed over to Northern for operations in 2018.
Underside of blushing bracket, Daedaleopsis confragosa. Not technically a mazegill but it looks sort of similar.