View allAll Photos Tagged headlamp
Riding around Foster Road, I found this Phillips Roaster locked up in front of a bike shop. Single speed, rod brakes. Love the bottle generator and headlamp. And check out the coils on the saddle.
... sort of, anyway...
this is an automotive headlamp bulb. One filament is burned, and I applied low voltage to the other so I could see it glow... just because I could. The bulb makes light when one end of the filament is connect to ground and the other end has voltage applied to it - causing it to glow and produce light. The bulb is mounted inside a reflector which projects the light onto the highway. Filaments are made of various materials, some producing a brighter light than others, but sometimes those filaments are more brittle and burn, or break, easier. I've applied about 4 volts to this filament, which is less than 1/8" in diameter and 1/2" long, so it could be used to help illuminate the photograph... tricky, huh ???
yeah, I know ... all of you really wanted to see and know how a headlamp makes light, didn't you ???
A beautiful blending of colors in this contemporary abstract. Will look great in the office or home.
The image was captured from an automobile halogen headlamp assembly and then digitally manipulated to create a contemporary look. The colors are drawn out from the surroundings... grass, trees, sky, and rocks.
All geared up between the second and third runs. The ascent was a bitch considering we had to climb up what we sledded down.
(Taken by Jess Robinson)
In 1963 Buddhist monk, Thich Quang Duc, drove in this car from Thien Mu Pagoda in Hue to Saigon and set himself on fire to protest about the way in which Buddhists were being persecuted by South Vietnam's Ngo Dinh Diem's administration.
From The Boy Mechanic, volume 4, © 1925. Because heaters are hard to find, but auto headlamps are easy to remove from autos.
We had a few minutes this afternoon to drop back by Centennial Park & see 576 again. It was actually a little depressing to see the condition she was in. Yes, she's protected from the elements but she would need a good bit of work to be operable again.