View allAll Photos Tagged cogic
This is the Mt.Washington Cog Railway in New Hampshire U.S.A.
It is the steepest inclined railway in the world.
The locomotive uses a center cog to drive the train up the mountain to the top.
Following the reverse rotafix triumph, old cog on the right, new on the left. The old one doesn't look tooooo bad, but the old chain had died, and the new one made the most godawful noise when any pressure was put on the pedals...
Comic Con "Set Phasers to Stunning" party, Howlin' Wolf, New Orleans. COG, the Consortium of Genius.
These cogs were part of a machine used in the mining industry.
I went full on with the HDR effects using Elements.
It's far too much but there's just something about that 'painting' look of the metal that I like.
This is a location I visited for the second time today. Along the Neuse River in New Bern, what is now a large park was used as a Nazi POW camp back in WWII. These huge cogs and gigantic chain are tucked away in the back corner of that park. I can stick my arm through the links in that huge chain and the gear lying in the back is at least 12 feet tall! Just another sign of a forgotten past...
EDIT: After a bit of speculation, I finally got some info on the history of this stuff. A local historical researcher let me know that these giant cogs and chain were from a ferry that operated near the spot.
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©2011 Zach Frailey
Cogs, grids and text from William Gibson's "Neuromancer" by Nigel Palmer, Nine Tattoo, Brighton UK (closer images in grey ink, 2 days old)
Rising tattoo by Tatu Pier, South Africa
Replaced my old photo of a cog with this one. Converted into a sign outside MOTAT. Museum of Transport and Technology.
Comic Con "Set Phasers to Stunning" party, Howlin' Wolf, New Orleans. COG, the Consortium of Genius.
22 for a 1968 Sturmey Archer 3. This gives me a gear low enough for some of the local hills, though I am still not strong enough for the Williamsburg Bridge. I'd never realized ow easy it is to swap a cog on these hubs. All you need is a flathead screwdriver (once the wheel is off).
The last part of the cogs process, this one being a painting with colour added into it.
(Part 3 of 3)
Broken on September 14, 2009, while riding at Hains Point. This is part of a Campagnolo Chorus 10-speed cassette, 11-25 range. The 13A cog broke during the 2008 Giro di Coppi race, and this cog must have been similarly flawed. In all my years of cycling, I'd never seen a cog crack and begin to pull off of a cassette.
More cogs lower down in the windmill, to aid with feeding the ground stone down through the damsels and the dressing machine.
Children from Papa Movoto school in Bandundu cheer as UNICEF rep. Ms Bentein and MONUSCO SRSG M. Kobler visit UNICEF school rehabilitation program , the 22nd of May 2014. © MONUSCO/Sylvain Liechti
MONUSCO SRSG, Martin Kobler addresses to media and guests during a visit of UNICEF rehabilitation of Papa Movoto school in Bandundu, the 22nd of May 2014. © MONUSCO/Sylvain Liechti
These are old cog wheels from another time when coal was King. They are now part of the Architecture at a local mall. dailyshoot ds471
The larger design makes room for rust, for small, spiked wheels in the grass, for long-gone wood nailed to nothing, bright in the morning sun.
MONUSCO SRSG Martin Kobler attend the launching ceremony of a MONUSCO/UNICEF rehabilitation project of the Libota Lilamu health center in Bandundu , the 22nd of May 2014. © MONUSCO/Sylvain Liechti
Taken during a Bath Flickr meet, in the tower of Bath Abbey.
Behind the face of Bath Abbey's clock. These are the bits that translate the rotational movement of the rod that comes from the clock's main mechanism into slightly different rotational movement of the clock's hands.