View allAll Photos Tagged headlamp
This is a genuine NOS wartime lamp.....not a recent repo.
I bought this from the chap I bought my Matchless and Humber OHC (I also bought a 1919 Indian Powerplus from him but swapped it away almost immediately)
A second entry for day 261 of the 2009photochallenge; the theme for the day was AUTOMOBILE. I know I'm only supposed to submit one to the pool, but I just can't resist. I'm such a rebel.;>
This 1978 911SC Porsche is headed out for a day of play, sporting Truck-Lite's 7 inch Round LED Headlamps
This is the headlamp assembly on a 2012 Toyota Corolla Ascent and shows from left to right:- Parking Lamp, Projector Beam Headlight, Indicator and Halogen Globe High-Beam.
This is a hire-car that my wife is using whilst her Commodore is being repaired after her car was involved in a traffic accident. 5:57pm, Saturday the 25th of August, 2012.
Posted on PigPog: pigpog.com/2014/09/15/headlamp/
No idea what the car is, but it’s a nice combination of curves and reflections.
Automobile headlamp
Photographed on 24th Street in the Noe Valley neighborhood
San Francisco, California
7 inch round LED Headlamp's anodized aluminum housing design prevents heat from building up and creating failure issues (Part No. 27250C)
Upgrade your mean machine with one mean headlamp; Introducing the Truck-Lite 7" pure LED headlamp. No confusing wiring. No ballasts. No headaches. Just plug and play. The best forward lighting technology available for the greatest cars on earth.
Rolleiflex Automat, Tri-X (expired 2002), developed in Xtol. Printed on Ilford FB Classic, scanned on HP Photosmart 4599.
My Rolleiflex Automat had been sitting on my shelf collecting dust for nearly 20 years. With fingers crossed, I ran a roll of expired tri-x through it a couple weeks ago. I'm thrilled with the results: the old-school Tessar lens seems to make everything look pretty. The only issue I encountered was user-error. The shadowy area on the right edge is where the film reel crept up on the spool during development.
The film was expired in 2002, shot at EI 200 and developed normally in Xtol 1:1 (developed normally for 400-speed). Since its purchase 15 years ago, the film was stored in a box and subjected to drastic changes in temperature.
British Railways headlamp codes for train identification as carried by locomotives before the advent of the TOPS system.