View allAll Photos Tagged compactor
Longma Special Vehicle manufacturer specializes in design and offering sanitation vehicles, like road sweeper, garbage truck, compactor, road washer, compression refuse collector, rubbish truck, garbage truck, rubbish vehicle, rubbish cart, dumper trucks, garbage compaction trucks, dry sweeper, watering cart, watering truck, watering vehicle
For more, please visit www.cnlonghorse.com or contact us by echo@cnlonghorse.com
Tel:0086 5925751940
Fax:0086 5925751941
Mobile:0086 15960212125
Skype: echo.2233
ICQ: 422-747-773
echo@cnlonghorse.com ; echo2233@gmail.com
MSN: echo.2233@hotmail.com
Yahoo Message: echo2233@yahoo.com
Appareil compact 35mm avec viseur central et mise au point auto focus. Objectif 4/35mm et pas de réglage. Flash à gauche débrayable et moteur d'entrainement. Film 135 DX en 24x36. 2 piles LR 06. Cellule. Appareil en plastique avec volet de fermeture.
Here's a classic late 60’s White Compact w/ 25 Yard Gar Wood 700.
Exact type Roy Windnagle operated. It’s Ironic I found this old ad.
Nick Bodnar, owner of Niagara Sanitation, was also the White Truck dealer in Buffalo,
and who purchased Roy’s business in the early 70’s.
Nick named the new Company T.L.C. - Trash-Lovers-Company....
and a subsidiary, Hector-the-collector....The man had a good sense of humor........
.......No Bull S***.........Those were the Co. names .....LOL
English:
Taken for this weeks TwPhCh (Twitter Photo Challenge). The subject was "Abstract".
Norwegian:
Ett av ukens forsøk på temaet "Abstrakt" for TwPhCh. Tar gjerne i mot tilbakemeldinger og respons :)
Se også dette bildet.
One of the more subtle senses we have is that of smell. When I opened my mums powder compact, and again when I took the lid off her lipstick - it was as if she was in the room with me.
The compact has a photo of her when she was 17 instead of powder, the blotter has the stain of her lipstick on it. There is a piece of her blue chiffon scarf, printed with the image of a Christmas card dad had sent her over 50 years previously. An antique perfume bottle stands in the corner, it now hold fragrant rose petal beads, made from her funeral flowers. Lastly the mirror reflects a single pink rose - one my own daughter gave me for mothers day the year I lost my own mother.
Another awsome Sport Compact event at WSID.Loads of cars made the trek from all over Aus to compete.Almost capacity entries on the track & a great selection of hot cars on show.
The presentation standard of Sport Compact drag cars has really amazed me so far this year, with a lot of the top runner track cars looking like prestine show cars with candy pearl paint jobs,tastefull air brushing and graffix and tuff drag spec rims all round. these guys have definatly stepped it up a notch!
Took a whole lot of photo's throughout the day, but unfortunatly forgot my memory backup so was limited to 4G worth of space...Ahhhrr.
Anyway, enjoy and please let me know what you think.
Jason
My pen is too big for the pen loop (located on the left side of the binder) even though it is partly made of elastic. I hook my pen to the closure.
Longma Special Vehicle manufacturer specializes in design and offering sanitation vehicles, like road sweeper, garbage truck, compactor, road washer, compression refuse collector, rubbish truck, garbage truck, rubbish vehicle, rubbish cart, dumper trucks, garbage compaction trucks, dry sweeper, watering cart, watering truck, watering vehicle
For more, please visit www.cnlonghorse.com or contact us by echo@cnlonghorse.com
Tel:0086 5925751940
Fax:0086 5925751941
Mobile:0086 15960212125
Skype: echo.2233
ICQ: 422-747-773
echo@cnlonghorse.com ; echo2233@gmail.com
MSN: echo.2233@hotmail.com
Yahoo Message: echo2233@yahoo.com
Today Olympus announced the E-420, a refresh of their "world's smallest" DSLR: the E-410. The E-420 retains about the same weight and dimensions, which makes it roughly 20% smaller by volume and lighter than the entry-level models from Canon, Nikon, and Pentax.
But the real news is a new 25mm f/2.8 pancake lens, only 23.5mm (0.9 inches) long. Pentax already offers an even smaller 40mm f/2.8 pancake lens, but the larger size of the Pentax mount means the new Olympus ends up significantly shallower (25% shallower than the smallest Canon or Nikon setup). Olympus seems to finally be delivering on the promise of Four-Thirds: DSLR quality in a smaller package.
More choice is always welcome, and combined with the soon-to-be-available Sigma DP1, we are now starting to bridge the gulf between DSLR and non-DSLR digital cameras.
At the bottom end of the digital camera marketplace we have cameraphones, which essentially take no space and cost nothing, since you were buying and carrying your phone around anyway, right?
Next are the ultra-compacts, or "pants pocket" cameras. Here you'll find the camera I just bought, the Panasonic Lumix DMC-FX35, as well as its slightly larger competitors, the Canon Powershot SD870 IS and Fujifilm FinePix F100fd. The Panasonic weighs about 50% more than my Motorola KRZR K1m, and is correspondingly larger, but still fits in my pants pocket. As a rough indicator of image quality, these ultra-compact sensors range from about 2.5x to 5x the size of a typical cameraphone's sensor. That's a big difference, and it's obvious in the pictures.
Until recently (with one exception), the only cameras with sensors larger than Fuji's were DSLRs. The smallest DSLR sensor - the Four-Thirds sensor used in Olympus and Panasonic DSLRs - was almost 5x larger than the Fuji F100fd's 1/1.6" sensor. Still larger were "full-frame" sensors used in higher-end Canon (and now Nikon) DSLRs. By my rough calculations, full-frame sensors are about 3.6x the area of Four-Thirds sensors, 17x that of the Fuji 1/1.6", 35x that of the 1/2.5" sensor most commonly used in ultra-compacts, and a whopping 89x the area of a cameraphone's sensor. The overall situation was that there was a smooth progression of compact camera sensor sizes from 1/4" through 1/1.6", and a spectrum of choices among DSLR sensors from 4/3" to full-frame, but a massive no man's land in between.
The exception was Sony's groundbreaking DSC-R1. For a number of reasons that particular model didn't set the world on fire, but it did point the way to a better future. The concept was simple: put a DSLR-sized sensor in a non-removable-lens compact camera. The actual product was a tough sell though: Sony needed to provide a wide zoom range, since this is what people expected in this category, but since lens size is directly proportional to sensor size, the camera ended up significantly bigger, heavier, and more expensive than an entry-level DSLR. It didn't matter that they included one hell of a lens for your $999; the rest of the camera just couldn't compete with cheaper DSLRs, and, in my experience, most people don't factor the cost of the lens into their camera-buying decisions.
Sony didn't follow up - soon afterwards, it entered the DSLR market. For the next year, there were no new products for those who wanted a compact but weren't satisfied with typical compact sensors.
Then came Leica digital. The Leica M8 sported the same relatively compact (albeit dense) dimensions of its film predecessors, but with an APS-H-sized (1.3x-crop) sensor. Although it was longer and weighed more than an entry-level DSLR, it was much shorter and shallower, and more importantly, rangefinder lenses were much smaller than equivalent SLR lenses. Assuming your stitches didn't burst under the strain of all that metal, a Leica could fit in your jacket pocket. And the image quality was at least on par with most DSLRs. There was only one catch: it cost $5500, with lens prices to match.
Fast forward another year-plus, and we're about to have two more mainstream options in the larger-sensor compact camera market. As I've already mentioned, there's Olympus' E-420 and its pancake lens. Then there is the truly groundbreaking Sigma DP1.
While the Olympus pancake kit is impressively compact, it's still almost as deep as it is tall. By contrast, the Sigma DP1 is only slightly larger and heavier than the impressively compact Panasonic DMC-TZ series of superzoom digicams, and is within the same "jacket pocket" class. The Olympus kit is 50% deeper, longer, much taller, and weighs almost twice as much. There is a catch, though, and again it is price. Probably like most people who owned a 35mm compact, my main reason for doing so was not compactness, but price. The Sigma DP1 has a street price of $800, which is $100 more than the Olympus pancake kit and 2-3x the price of a typical compact digicam.
So the current choices for a large-sensor compact camera are:
Leica: biggish, heavy, $7100 w/ 28mm f/2.8 lens
Olympus: big, fairly heavy, $700 w/ 25mm f/2.8 lens
Sigma: small, light, $800 w/ 16.6mm f/4 lens
As you can see, none of the three are direct competitors, even if they're all trying to fill the same need. My opinion is:
Leica: ludicrous price; not compact by my standards
Olympus: not small enough to make a difference in use
Sigma: the right choice, for the right price - which is under $500
You already know my actual choice: a conventional ultra-compact, the Panasonic Lumix DMC-FX35. Price was the primary consideration. As I am generally happy with my DSLR, a compact is a second camera. Accordingly, I am not willing to pay as much as I did for my DSLR, and I want its features to complement, not duplicate, my DSLR's. Unlike the other choices, the Panny goes wider than my DSLR standard zoom, can go with me places I can't take a bag or jacket, and takes 720p movies. Yes, I am going to pay the price in image quality - but from what I can tell from sample photos, Panasonic doesn't give up much at small display sizes. I'll just have to adjust my expectations and only print small - isn't that how we were supposed to use miniature cameras before the rise of the megapixel?
As for Leica: you have to admit that a big chunk of the price is brand premium. But what is that brand worth when it's slapped on the front of every plastic wonder that comes out of the Panasonic factory?
Just in case you would like to know the spelling of CMS in different languages... ;-)
As seen on the wall of the "caverne" after meeting HAL at the CERN....
Ramphocelus passerinii
Guapiles
Historia Natural
Reproducción
Su nido consiste en una taza endeble y bastante voluminosa, construida principalmente de tiras de hojas secas unidas con materiales fibrosos o como mecate, forrada de raicillas, zarcillos e hifas de hongos. Con frecuencia cuenta con 1 ó 2 helechos vivos pequeños por fuera. Se localiza a una altura de 0.3 a 6 m. entre el follaje de un árbol o arbusto.
Ponen 2 huevos, 3 en muy raras ocasiones, de color azul pálido o grises, rara vez blancuzcos, con manchas, salpicaduras y rayones negros, café y lila pálido (ver imagen). Se reproducen de marzo a agosto. En ocasiones ponen 2 nidadas por año.
Sus nidos son parasitados por el pius (Molothrus aeneus).
Alimentación
Se alimenta de muchos frutos, inclusive bayas, amentos de guarumo (Cecropia spp.) y de Piper. Captura insectos y arañas entre el follaje y desciende en ocasiones hasta el suelo y otras veces sale volando detrás de los insectos.
Comportamiento
Viajan en bandadas dispersas a las que a menudo se unen Saltator, otras tangaras, reinitas y otras aves pequeñas.
Duermen en grupos compactos hasta de 12 individuos, entre helechos o matorrales densos.
Habitat y Distribución
Habitat
Prefieren bosques secundarios no muy densos, matorrales, potreros enmalezados, jardines, arbustos aledaños a viviendas, áreas parcialmente despejadas y bordes de bosque, y en ocasiones penetra un poco en los bosques húmedos.
Distribución
Es una especie residente abundante del lado del Caribe, desde las bajuras hasta los 1200 m., y en raras ocasiones hasta los 1700 m. Hacia el norte de la vertiente del Pacífico se encuentra muy localizada en los rincones húmedos de las bajuras y en los pasos de montaña de las cordilleras.
Distribución fuera de Costa Rica
Se encuentran desde el sur de México hasta el oeste de Panamá.
Distribución de Area de conservación
Amistad CaribeHuetar NorteArenalCordillera Volcanica CentralGuanacasteTortugueroAmistad Pacifico
Usos y Manejos
Usos
Es apreciada por algunos pajareros por su canto y plumaje, por lo que la capturan para mantenerla en cautiverio (aves de jaula).
Descripción
Descripción científica
Mide 16 cm. y pesa 31 grs. El pico es grueso con los rami de las mandíbulas inflados y plateados. La especie Ramphocelus passerinii difiere de R. costaricensis principalmente en el color de las hembras.
Es negro aterciopelado, excepto la parte baja de la espalda, la rabadilla y las coberteras infracaudales, que son escarlata brillante (ligeramente más anaranjadas en R. costaricensis ). El iris es de castaño a rojo oscuro; el pico es plateado con los tomios y la punta negros, y las patas son negruzcas.
La hembra muestra la cabeza gris parduzca y la región superior oliva ocráceo, con la rabadilla más pálida y brillante. Las alas y la cola son fuscas y la garganta es ante grisáceo. El resto de la parte inferior es oliva ocráceo, más brillante en el pecho. El pico es a menudo gris más opaco. La hembra de R. costaricensis es parecida, pero con la parte inferior más ocrácea y una faja ancha anaranjada oscura a través del pecho. La rabadilla y las coberteras supracaudales son de color anaranjado ocráceo (las hembras en la época de cría cambian considerablemente el color del pecho y la rabadilla), y la espalda presenta un tinte ocráceo.
Los individuos juveniles son similares a la hembra adulta (R. costaricensis ), pero con el pecho menos anaranjado.
Los machos inmaduros con frecuencia presentan plumas rojas y negras dispersas, con una mezcla negra y oliva en las alas y la cola, y adquieren el plumaje de adulto en forma gradual, aproximadamente a lo largo de los primeros seis meses.
Información taxonómica
Reino: Animalia
Filo: Chordata
Clase: Aves
Orden: Passeriformes
Familia: Thraupidae
Género: Ramphocelus