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My first fixed-gear setup; a suicide configuration on a dumpster-salvaged Peugeot frame. That's 52/17 on 27x1-1/4 for those that are wondering. A definite knee killer, but it was the only parts I had available. This drivetrain was a quick fix when the retro-direct drivetrain on the same frame broke down and I didn't feel like re-engineering it. The fixed-gear stuck around for quite a while and prompted me to buy my first proper parts to build up the Raleigh, which was later swapped onto the Sekine.
Douglas A-26 Invader
Nostalgia Inc
Las Cruces 18/2/2005
On Mark Marketeer Model - Executive Configuration
Various configurations of my art displays and paintings on the making during that one full month show at the tourism office of Auvers-sur-Oise, September 2005.
Canon DSLR filter configuration..from the XTi and newer models.
Low Pass Filter-1(LPF-1) is the Stock UV/IR Blocking Filter, along with also having the Self Cleaning Piezo element attached to it.
LPF-2 is only a Color Limiting Filter designed to constrict the spectrum reaching the sensor to what "we see"...therefor also cutting out most of the spectrum the silicon sensor is capable of capturing/sensitive to.
Removal/replacement of the LPF-2 filter is how you gain maximum transmission of the Hydrogen Alpha spectrum, which is the 'sought after' spectrum for Astro Imaging since most of the cosmos, or the objects we want to image in the cosmos, are made of Ha(Hydrogen Alpha).
For a Full Spectrum Camera, you will simply remove both stock filters.
This will give you a camera with maximum versatility as it can perform any function you can probably think of...from Daytime IR, 'night vision', Astro, and of course the 'standard daytime' images you buy your camera for in the first place; by simply adding a filter into the system to block UV/IR, and give you a normal WB(white balance).
The kinda stuff that Industrial Light & Magic can IMITATE...but NEVER *DUPLICATE!*
Now or **EVER!!**
via John Currin (JC - Ex RNZN) - Google+ Public Posts ift.tt/2dWXieG
Photo: Brazilian Navy’s H225M multirole helicopter unveiled in combat configuration
Here's the setup. I used a Bogen Superclamp to attach the beam to the bike. The beam is a 80/20 extrusion profile - standard fare on my robotic competition team's arsenal in college. Need a ball gathering, basket shooting robot built in 3 weeks? There's a reason they call this "the big boy's tinkertoys"
On the bike handlebar end, I've drilled a 3/16" hole through the extrusion to allow an allen key to go through and tighten a 1/4-20 button head socket cap screw to the superclamp. Mount Point #2 was done with a regular 80/20 t-nut.
What does it mean to create a truly autonomous machine, independent from human control? And what happens when organs live outside of a body? Could this help us understand that the power of the human body lies in its ability to be different and to take on unexpected forms and identities?
Violently entangled within the performance space are three elements: an artificially intelligent prosthesis, out-of-body organic wombs and a human body. The prosthesis uses artificial intelligence algorithms to learn in real time how to move, exist and perform on stage. The wombs live and pulsate through the activity of microbial cultures. The sounds of the performer’s body are re-synthesised and transformed into a powerful and visceral auditory experience.
Credit: vog.photo
A derringer is a small handgun that is neither a revolver, semi-automatic pistol, nor machine pistol. It is not to be confused with mini-revolvers or pocket pistols, although some later derringers were manufactured with the pepperbox configuration. The modern derringer is often multi barreled, and is generally the smallest usable handgun of any given caliber and barrel length due to the lack of a moving action, which takes up more space behind the barrel. It is frequently used by women because it is easily concealable in a purse or a stocking.
The original Philadelphia Deringer was a muzzleloading caplock single-shot pistol introduced in 1825 by Henry Deringer. In total, approximately 15,000 Deringer pistols were manufactured. All were single-barrel pistols with back-action percussion locks, typically .41 caliber with rifled bores and walnut stocks. Barrel length varied from 1.5 to 6 in (38 to 152 mm), and the hardware was commonly a copper-nickel alloy known as "German silver".
The term "derringer" became a genericized misspelling during the reporting of the Lincoln assassination, which was committed with a concealed Philadelphia Deringer. Many copies of the original Philadelphia Deringer pistol were made by other gunmakers worldwide, and the name remained often misspelled; this misspelling soon became an alternative generic term for any pocket pistol, along with the generic phrase "palm pistol", which Deringer's competitors invented and used in their advertising. With the advent of metallic cartridges, pistols produced in the modern form are still commonly called "derringers".
The ancestor to the deringer of the Old West was the boxlock overcoat pistol used by travelers from the late 18th century onward as protection from highwaymen. These were also known as boot pistols, Toby pistols, manstopper pistols, vest pocket pistols, and muff pistols because they could be concealed in a woman’s hand-warmer muff. Originally made as flintlocks, later versions used cap and ball ignition and sometimes featured turn-off barrels for faster reloading. Double-barreled caplock pocket pistols, commonly known as twister pistols, became popular in England during the Regency era and also saw use among Union Army officers during the American Civil War. These served as the forerunner to the Old West gambler's over-and-under deringer and also to the pepperbox revolver with the addition of a ratchet to mechanically rotate the barrels.
The Philadelphia Deringer was a small percussion handgun designed by Henry Deringer (1786–1868) and produced from 1825 through 1868. A popular concealed carry handgun of the era, this pocket pistol design was widely copied by competitors, sometimes down to the markings.
For loading a Philadelphia Deringer, one would typically fire a couple of percussion caps on the handgun, to dry out any residual moisture contained in the tube or at the base of the barrel, to prevent a subsequent misfire. One would then remove the remains of the last fired percussion cap and place the handgun on its half-cock notch, pour 15 to 25 grains (1 to 2 g) of black powder down the barrel, followed by ramming a patched lead ball down onto the powder, being very careful to leave no air gap between the patched ball and the powder, to prevent the handgun from exploding when used. (The purpose of the patch on the ball was to keep the ball firmly lodged against the powder, to avoid creating what was called a "short start" when the ball was dislodged from being firmly against the powder.)
A new percussion cap would then be placed on the tube (nipple), and the gun was then loaded and ready to fire. (The half-cock notch prevented the hammer from falling if the trigger was bumped accidentally.) Then, to fire the handgun, the user would fully cock the hammer, aim, and squeeze the trigger. Upon a misfire, the user could fully re-cock the hammer, and attempt to fire the handgun once more, or switch to a second Deringer. Accuracy was highly variable; although front sights were common, rear sights were less common, and some Philadelphia Deringers had no sights at all, being intended for point-and-shoot use instead of aim and shoot, across poker-table distances. Professional gamblers, and others who carried regularly, would often fire and reload daily, to decrease the chance of a misfire.
Deringer's production records, and contemporaneous records of his imitators, indicate that these pistols were almost always sold in matching pairs. (A typical price was $15 to $25 for a pair, with silver-inlaid and engraved models selling at higher prices.) The choice of buying a pair, in part, was to compensate for the limited power of a single-shot, short-barreled pistol, and to compensate for a design considerably less reliable than subsequent cartridge derringer designs. Original Deringers are almost never found still in their matched pairs today.
Initially popular with military officers, the Deringer became widely popular among civilians who wished to own a small and easily concealable pistol for self-defense.
In the Old West, derringers were commonly known as vest-pocket pistols, sleeve guns, and boot pistols.
In total, approximately 15,000 Deringer pistols were manufactured. All were single-barrel pistols with back action percussion locks, typically 0.41-inch (10 mm) rifled bores, and walnut stocks. Barrel length varied from 1.5 to 6 inches (38 to 152 mm), and the hardware was commonly a copper-nickel alloy known as "German silver". The back action lock was a later, improved design among locks, which had its spring and mechanism located behind the hammer, where it was thereby protected from dirt, fired cap residue, and gunpowder residue, unlike earlier front action locks that had their springs and mechanism located directly in the path of such residue in front of the hammer, under the tube.
Because of their small size and easy availability, Deringers sometimes had the dubious reputation of being a favored tool of assassins. The most famous Deringer used for this purpose was fired by John Wilkes Booth who assassinated United States President Abraham Lincoln at Ford's Theatre in Washington, D.C., on April 14, 1865. Booth's Deringer was unusual in that the rifling twisted counterclockwise (left-handed twist), rather than the typical clockwise twist.
Daniel Moore patented a single-shot metallic cartridge .38 Rimfire pistol in 1861. These pistols had barrels that pivoted sideways on the frame to allow access to the breech for reloading. Moore would manufacture them until 1865 when he sold out to the National Arms Company, which produced single-shot .41 Rimfire Deringers until 1870 when it was acquired by Colt's Patent Firearms Manufacturing Company. Colt continued to produce the .41 Rimfire Deringer after the acquisition, as an effort to help break into the metallic-cartridge gun market, but also introduced its own three single-shot Colt Deringer models, all of them also chambered in the .41 Rimfire cartridge. The last model to be in production, the third Colt Deringer, was not dropped until 1912. The third Colt Deringer model was re-released in the 1950s for western movies, under the name "Fourth Model Colt Deringer".
One of the more common deringers found in the Old West were the Sharps deringers. They are four-barrel, single-action pepperboxes with revolving firing pins. They come in .22, .30 and .32 rimfire, and their four barrels slide forward to load and unload. First patented in 1849, they were not made until 1859, when Sharps patented a practical derringer design. These first model deringers have brass frames and fired the recently introduced .22 Rimfire metallic cartridges. The second model was a .30 Rimfire deringer. The third model deringer was a .32 Rimfire, with an iron frame, and the barrel release was moved from under the frame to the left side of the frame. The fourth model deringer was also a .32 Rimfire, with a new "birdshead" grip and slightly shorter barrels, otherwise, it was virtually identical to the third model. Production of these little pistols came to an end with the death of Christian Sharps in 1874.
Remington Arms manufactured more than 150,000 Model 95 over-under double-barreled derringers, also called the Model 95 Double Deringer, from 1866 until the end of their production in 1935. The gun was made only in .41 rimfire. The Remington derringer design doubled the capacity while maintaining a compact size, by adding a second barrel on top of the first and pivoting the barrels upward to reload. Each barrel chambered one round, and a cam on the hammer alternated between the top and bottom barrels. There were four models with several variations. The .41 Short bullet moved very slowly, at about 425 feet per second (130 m/s), around half the speed of a modern .45 ACP.
Remington also constructed the .32 short Rimfire "Rider Magazine Repeating" pistol. The magazine tube under the barrel held five rounds of ammunition, plus one in the chamber. Muzzle velocity was between 675 and 700 ft/s (206 and 213 m/s) with a 60-grain (3.9 g) .32 bullet. This particular model featured a hammer that also drew back the breach block and lifted a new cartridge out of the magazine upon cocking. Relaxing one's grip on the hammer closed the breech block, but left the hammer cocked.
A military pistol that is a deringer design is the FP-45 Liberator, a .45 ACP insurgency weapon dropped behind Axis lines in World War II. The FP-45 was a crude, single-shot pistol designed to be cheaply and quickly mass produced. It had just 23 largely stamped and turned steel parts that were cheap and easy to manufacture. It fired a .45 caliber pistol cartridge from an unrifled barrel. Due to this limitation, it was intended for short-range use (1–4 yards (1–4 m)) either as a last-ditch self-defense gun or to sneak up on and kill an unsuspecting Axis soldier to steal a more serviceable weapon. Its maximum effective range was only about 25 feet (8 m). At longer range, the bullet would begin to tumble and stray off course. Five extra rounds of ammunition could be stored in the pistol grip. The original delivered cost for the FP-45 was $2.10 per unit, lending it the nickname "Woolworth pistol".
While the classic Remington design is a single-action deringer with a hammer and tip-up action, the High Standard D-100, introduced in 1962, is a hammer-less, double-action derringer with a half-trigger-guard and a standard break action design. These double-barrel derringers were chambered for .22 Long Rifle and .22 Magnum and were available in blued, nickel, silver, and gold-plated finishes. Although they were discontinued in 1984, American Derringer obtained the rights to the High Standard design in 1990 and produced a larger, .38 Special, version. These derringers, called the "DS22" and "DA38", are still made and are popular concealed-carry handguns.
The COP 357 is a four-barrel, hammerless, double-action, .357 Magnum derringer with the barrels stacked in a 2 × 2 block. Introduced in 1984, it is not much larger than a .25 ACP semi-automatic pistol, and is significantly smaller than a small-frame revolver. A smaller-caliber version of the "Mini COP" in .22 Magnum was also made by American Derringer.
DoubleTap derringers are modern, hammerless, double-action, double-barreled, large caliber derringers designed for personal protection and introduced by DoubleTap Defense in 2012. They feature stainless steel ported barrels and aluminum or titanium alloy frames. They also hold two extra rounds in the grip. Its makers have stated that they drew inspiration from the FP-45 Liberator pistol, which also held extra ammunition in the grip.
EVette, the autonomous GPS robot, in Summer 2008 configuration. The rear pair of drive wheels have been removed and replaced with a heavy-duty castering wheel. It no longer tracks as straight as it did in 4-wheel drive configuration.
In development since 2005, EVette was designed for the Mini Grand Challenge competition, hosted by Penn State University Abington Campus. In this competition, a robot must navigate a meandering path, then go offroad in the last segment, with only 6 GPS waypoints given 24 hours before the contest.
Most competitors used laptop computers and camera vision systems to navigate the path and identify obstacles and offroad conditions. EVette uses only sonar sensors and a newly added low-cost vision system for all of its obstacle avoidance and path navigation, as well as GPS and compass for waypoint planning and identification.
The autonomous 4-wheel drive skid steer robot is propelled by 2 Power Wheels Corvette drive trains. The master controller is a PIC16F877. A Parallax BS2P reads and
processes compass and GPS data. A PIC16F627 reads a 2 axis accelerometer and drives a unique self leveling gimbal that keeps the compass level. A Winbond controller directs the music and speech subsystem. Finally, the new vision module is controlled by a PIC 16Fxxx which reads the vision array, processes the data, and communicates with the master controller.
X803600-011
The original Xbox 360 configuration used in the initial Premium and Core machines released in the end of November 2005. These are also know as the RRoD (Red Ring of Death) machines because the GPU chip warps away from the motherboard because of excessive heat.
IBM 90 nm CPU
ATI 90 nm GPU and 90nm on-chip eDRAM
Low profile GPU cooler
Standard CPU cooler
203 Watt output power supply
Product configuration: RT02-M-2-P1(10K)-02(89)-HD10b7-BT2②③R-W100H-HV1-M6
RT02: RunnTech 02 series industrial joystick;
M: friction clutch/hold position movement;
2: dual axis, cross movement;
P1: simple 2 directions output;
02: 2 directional contacts in each axis;
89: contact position @ forward & backward;
HD10b7: grip with deadman trigger, 2 buttons & hall effect thumbwheel;
W100H-HV1: 0~2.5~5V output hall effect thumbwheel;
M6: mounting dimension: 76x76mm, central hole: 92mm.
RunnTech Heavy Duty 3 Axis (Third Axis is Hall Effect Thumbwheel) Friction Hold Position Joystick Lever
About RT02 Multi-axis Joystick Controller
RT02 rugged industrial joystick controller is designed for hydraulic proportional control and variable frequency motor control, such as Construction machinery, Precision machine, Military robotics, Refuse handling trucks, Unmanned vehicles, Rotary drilling rigs, Cranes, Marine etc. Available in one two or three axis configurations, this joystick can be supplied with non-contact Hall effect sensors or long life potentiometer tracks.
A multiple configuration customer display for your POS solution
*Special Features:
1. Easy to read and high quality VFD display
→ with Blue–green color and large character, supporting 20columns x
2 lines and 5x7 dot matrix and offering Long life, High reliability and High display quality
2. Adjustable viewing angle and user’s friendly design
→ display area of DSP-850 series can be controlled by window function.
Furthermore, it supports wide adjustable viewing angle up to
60 degree and rotation angle up to
270 degree
3. Built with Combo interface and bundled with 2 cables
→ 2-in-1-customer display with USB & RS232
→ it is built with 24V power in and power out connecting port.
4. Multi-functional for pass through, OPOS and hand shaking
→ OPOS command and hand shaking for USB and RS232 connecting
*How to download the PDF file:
Visit our website: www.birch.com.tw
→H/W + S/W Drawer→peripherals→
DSP-850II→Specs and Brochure
*Further information:
Please visit www.birch.com.tw or contact us directly (sales@mail.birch.com.tw)
The site configuration and weather are now making it difficult to photograph the work but I am determined to continue to document the project. A hi-vis jacket and the remarkable lens on my beautiful camera seem to be the necessary tools.
After a slow start, a sudden, impressive burst of progress has seen the former railway embankment lowered to a level whereby it can, eventually, carry BRT under Newgate Lane and, I think, a new bridge.
Even if you are not interested in BRT, plant enthusiasts will enjoy some of the pictures in this series.
One of the weirder SunTour cogs. It's an A cog, but is only used in the second position on the 5 speed Winner configuration. Who uses 16T as the second largest cog? And why not just use a regular A16 with a regular spacer? Crazy.
Cold hearted orb that rules the night,
Removes the colors from our sight.
Red is grey and yellow white,
But we decide which is right.
And which is an illusion.
-Graeme Edge
Exploring a few analogies to help explain approaches of establishing an organization's web presence across one or more web properties.
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2015 Jeep Patriot configurations
2015 Jeep Patriot configurations – The 2015 Patriot , sibling to Jeep’s softer Compass adorable ute , takes the very best...
autobestcar.com/2015/02/2015-jeep-patriot-configurations....
Timbuk2 Hacker Daypack. This view shows the backpack strap configuration. This is my preferred style.
Configuration: With Maneurop and Tecumseh hermetic piston compressor, air condenser, the flake ice maker can be directly put into use with water and electricity on spot.
Application: supermarket, meat processing, food industry and seafood processing.
Focusun is the world leader on the ice making machine market, chilling and refrigerations systems.
More information on Focusun website: www.chinaicemachine.com
The antennas at the VLA where in the D configuration thus all of the antennas were close together and not spread out as they were the last time I was there. I couldn't stay for the night shooting so I hope others who stayed will post their shots.
Start Eclipse, and edit Windows>Preferences>RDS Configuration. Add local or remote ColdFusion servers here.
In its usual configuration, the cutting table is set up as a huge ironing board. On top of the table base (which is 'upholstered' with Tyvek house wrap), I've layered, from the bottom, (1) a layer of rubber backed thermal lining with the rubber side facing upwards to protect the Tyvek base from the moisture of steam from the iron, (2) three layers of wool blanketing, and (3) a custom sized giant ironing board cover.
Abraham Hicks Parenting Advice~ Autistic children as teachershttp://effectivediets.org/abraham-hicks-parenting-advice-autistic-children-as-teachers/
Source/Repost=>
effective-diets.tumblr.com/post/155985479767 **Benjamin Ronen __ Sr. Configuration Management Specialist** effective-diets.tumblr.com/
Shilton church is a mostly 14th/15th century building with a west tower and an unusual configuration of no aisle on the south side of the nave but a double one to the north; the outer aisle is a Victorian addition by George Gilbert Scott when he restored the church in 1865.
The interior is fairly dark with the south nave wall and north arcade leaning outwards dramatically (also an odd hollowed out piscina recess in the south east nave window recess). The fittings are mostly Victorian, but the pieces of tracery on the low chancel screen panelling are fragments of the 15th century rood screen. The stained glass is Victorian too, (the east window by Clayton & Bell, others by Hardman's) but two windows have 14th century elements, the west window in the tower with some fragmentary grisaille and red glass, whilst in the nave clerestorey are two shields of the Earl of Essex.
The church is usually kept locked outside of service times; I owed my first visit to the help of a kind churchwarden who unlocked for me. On this occasion my former colleagues from Norgrove Studios were working on a south nave window enabling me to revisit and give a short talk on the glass (in addition to much improving my photographic record).