View allAll Photos Tagged copperpipe
LNER Peppercorn A1 Pacific No. 60103 "Tornado" straining to leave Edinburgh Waverley 26th July 2012 with the returning "Elizabethan" railtour to London Kings Cross.
(Please view F11 in lightbox for intended best.)
copper piping on an old domestic oil storage tank seems folded up, and ivy has woven itself around it - knitted together
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Discarded old pipes and tubing in a dark storage area of an old building.
Copyright 2008, Amy Strycula
Here we see some chemical weathering on the copper pipes in my basement. The moisture that tends to accumulate at the joints of the pipes mixes with the copper and forms copper oxide, which is typically a blue/green in color.
I was painting the ground floor ceiling when I noticed water dripping from it. I traced the drip to a second floor closet. I removed the ceiling of the closet, and found the drip, which led to the third floor high-efficiency furnace. The pipe is only 4 years old but was split and eaten through. The plumber and I both took pictures of it. I'm going to take it to their shop for analysis. Back to painting that ceiling.
it's actually the inside of a copper pipe, but cigarette lighter was the most interesting guess of what it was
PVC Electric conduit crosses over copper water pipe that I had to patch after I jack hammered it getting to the old rotted out metal electric conduit.
The first one i have installed, gives 12l/m, 1.5bar pressure. (12l/m being the maximum you can pull from the main). The job was a loft conversion and our part was to install a combination boiler and an ensuite in the new loft and replace existing bathroom suite on first floor, there was no room in the property for an unvented cylinder and would have been unsuitable due to the poor incoming flow rate yet no room anymore for the existing CWSC. The pump did make a differance on the performance of the shower but not really that noticeable on the basin when both hot and cold were drawing (in my oppinion).
Water piping for new water sprinkler system, New back-flow device and a water line to add an outside drinking fountain
Een zelfgemaakte kopieerstandaard voor middenformaat-negatieven (6x4,5).
Bestaand uit CanonD500 met macro-objectief van Tamron, een zakstatief waarvan de pootjes zijn verlengd met koperbuis 15mm (lengte 50cm), een macrorail voor fijnafstelling van de afstand tot het negatief en een zelfgemaakte lichtbak. Ondereind van de buisjes afgedekt met vilt tegen krassen en kettinkjes tussen de poten tegen ongewenst verschuiven. Klaar om 298 negatieven te kopiëren. Een goedkopere oplossing dan een professionele filmscanner.
A homemade copystand for mediumformat negatives (6x4,5).
Comprises of a Canon EOS D500 with a Tamron-macrolens 90mm on a pockettripod with legs extended with 15 mm copperpipe, a macrorail to finetune the distance between camera and negative and a homemade light box. Bottomend of the pipes is covered with felt, chains between the pipes to prevent shifting. ready to scan 298 negatives. And a whole lot cheaper than a professional scanner.
trying to unravel the piping I quickly found out it was copper and ... it cracked! Old fuel sprinkled out (I still smell of it 6 hours later)