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Cool building design!

Ratcliffe on Soar power station cooling towers

Inspiration came from the "Zalman Reserator 1" CPU and system cooling tower. I am not very good in heat transfer calculations and don't have an appropriate simulation software like Comsol (at least I didn't found one yet). Cooling effects are only estimated. It is primary based on the chimney effect in the middle of the tube and by spreading the heat in a star self similar fashion. I would like to test if there would be any effect by ultrasonic dispensed water drops in the middle tube. the tube is designed with two layers to guarantee a closed primary cooling fluid circuit. Cooling fluid should be water. Maybe cooper based casing or aluminum.

Cooling Towers - Lincolnshire

Sock Singles in "Capri" and "Cerulean"

I'm posting this today to remind me how cool our summer has been in NY State up to this point...That all ended early last week & today it's suppose to be 95...I took this on a hike up to a mountain called Wittenberg in the Catskills...

Please view large:).

View On Black

I quit on February 20th and it already feels like I may have added a few years to my lifespan. I have been off patches for about 3 weeks so am supposedly free from nicotine addiction. If only life was as simple as it is in the text books. Nevertheless, it is getting progressively easier and I feel much fitter already - and more positive. I do worry about a moment of weakness leading to failure and I have dreams about smoking now, which I didn't have when I was smoking. This is apparently common. Why can't I dream about Cameron Diaz instead?

This cool house is dedicated to all the people who are suffering due to heat waves in warm parts of our world.

 

You are welcome to chill out in my stream.

 

What do you prefer - the heat wave or this?

Cooling Castle is a privately owned castle in North Kent and is not open to the public. Only parts of it are visible from the road leading to Cooling Church but this includes the impressive outer gatehouse and one corner tower of the outer bailey.

 

www.flickr.com/photos/barryslemmings/sets/72157629732350755/ to see the full set.

 

The castle was built in the troubled 1380-1385 period by John De Cobham, 3rd Baron Cobham. This period also saw the building of Bodiam Castle and the West Gate of Canterbury. While ostensibly built to protect against French raids these defences also served to overawe the local population who had risen in revolt against Richard II in 1381 - the period known at The Peasants Revolt.

 

Cooling, Bodiam and the Canterbury gatehouse also share many stylistic features including their 'inverted keyhole' gunloops, the earliest dateable gunloops in England. Some gunloops at an abbey on the Isle of Wight may be earlier (1365) but this cannot be confirmed.

 

The castle was composed of a western inner bailey with strong Bodiam-style stone walls and round towers and an eastern outer bailey surrounded by an earth embankment and round stone corner towers - the whole site being surrounded by a moat or ditch. The moat at the western end is still flooded but is hidden behind modern trees. It is possible that the earth eastern bailey was only topped with a palisade supported by the stone towers.

 

A later occupant of the castle was Sir John Oldcastle - who had married a Cobham - and who was a supporter of John Wyciiffe and the Lollards. The Lollards were an early form of Protestantism and were regarded as heretics in Catholic England. He was hanged on Christmas Day 1417 and his body was burned to prevent his resurrection on Judgement Day.

 

In 1554 Sir Thomas Wyatt revolted against Queen Mary and attacked the castle on his advance to London. The current Lord Cobham surrendered Cooling Castle after a siege of only six hours pleading shortage of cannon and lack of support. Wyatt captured Lord Cobham and his two sons and forced them to march with him to London but they managed to escape and went back to Cooling.

 

The castle was damaged by cannon fire and was never fully repaired. The present house was built around 1670 and is in private hands.

St James' Church at Cooling in North Kent is now in the care of the Churches Conservation Trust. It dates from the late 1200s but may replace an earlier Saxon church on the same site. The nave, chancel and the lower part of the tower were built 1280 to 1320AD but the tower did not reach full height until about 1400AD.

 

www.flickr.com/photos/barryslemmings/sets/72157629378105780/ to see the full set.

 

Its fame comes from the Victorian period when novelist Charles Dickens lived at nearby Gads Hill. The church is believed to be the inspiration for the churchyard scene in Great Expectations where young Pip meets the convict Magwitch. The 13 child graves near the church door are also believed to be the inspiration for the five graves of Pip's siblings in the same book. These have since become known as 'Pip's Graves'.

 

Internally the 40-foot long chancel is almost the same length as the 50-foot nave. There is sign of various 19th century restorations while the wooden medieval north door is still hanging on its hinges but the doorway behind is blocked solid. The font is 13th century and probably the oldest item inside the church. The pulpit is made of 18th century material recut in the 19th century. In the chancel the south wall has a sedilia and a rare double piscina. The double piscina dates this area to 1272-1307AD.

 

A unique feature at Cooling is the vestry wall which is decorated with hundreds of cockle shells. This is probably Victorian and may refer to the scallop shell emblem of St James the Great. An unusual wall memorial on the wall behind the pulpit records the drowning of a seaman who fell overboard off Rio in 1852.

Cool School Challenge, held on Feb. 3, where Students and teachers took an icy dip in the Atlantic as part of the Polar Plunge® Fest in Virginia Beach

  

Photography by Craig McClure

17106

 

© 2017

ALL Rights reserved by City of Virginia Beach.

Contact photo[at]vbgov.com for permission to use. Commercial use not allowed.

Cool School Challenge, held on Feb. 3, where Students and teachers took an icy dip in the Atlantic as part of the Polar Plunge® Fest in Virginia Beach

  

Photography by Craig McClure

17106

 

© 2017

ALL Rights reserved by City of Virginia Beach.

Contact photo[at]vbgov.com for permission to use. Commercial use not allowed.

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Powder enjoys a dip in the pond.

Ruffy wearing my fav sunglasses. They stayed on her less than 3 seconds, before she shook them off. :-)

cool alley my friend TREY CAREY showed me when we were next to publix, he took the original pic and i liked it , so i took the second pic with my fisheye and made it into an HDR

from bit.ly/13Ms88y

 

Through GoPro Through GoPro - They are heroes, look through their eyes

 

Check out these GoProHero2 images:

 

Hawaii 2013Image by BOMBTWINZ

Dcim9gopro

 

Hawaii 2013

 

Read more Cool GoProHero2 images Thomas

This weekend was dedicated to all things Scottish so there was a lot of plaid and kilts everywhere - and it was a very cold morning too. I spent most of the day just wandering around aimlessly. There are so many great photo ops that I'm very content with that.

  

I took these photos in mid-November 2016 at the Texas Renaissance Festival in Todd Mission, Texas, about 50 miles NW of Houston. I think this is the largest Renaissance Festival in the USA.

 

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