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U.S. Bellows, Inc. specially designed and manufactured a double hinged refractory lined expansion joint for a chemical refinery in Michigan. This expansion joint with an overall length of 40'-0" has a 4" thick refractory lining installed per UOP specifications. It also consists of testable two plies SB-443/Inco 625LCF bellows, 5/8" thick, A516-70 mitered elbows, 5/8" thick, A516-70 spool, A240-304 liners, A516-70 hinges, A193, GR 7 tie rods, and A516-70 lugs.
This expansion joint is designed for 50 PSIG and 1440°F with 3" of lateral movement per B31.3 and EJMA standards. To ensure quality, 100% X-Ray and 100% dye-penetration tests were performed on the bellows after forming. A pneumatic test at 75 PSIG was conducted on the expansion joint assembly prior to shipping.
"...the action of the universe is metamorphosis--its articulation, metaphor. White crow, black swan, these are the hinges of Heaven."
--Ronald Johnson, ARK
"The crow wish'd that every thing was black,the owl that every thing was white."
--William Blake, Proverbs of Hell
During a customer training in France last week, we encountered this SafeStep door, where the customer coated all the aluminium parts in white. If finishes of to a very nice door. Not yet in white available from FlexiForce today, but looking at this result: Probably soon!
Contact your FlexiForce sales team for more information.
Rust and wood texture in miniature. Part of a 1/16th scale diorama in progress. Thanks for the real world inspiration!
Rust and wood texture in miniature. Part of a 1/16th scale diorama in progress. Thanks for the real world inspiration!
Nikolai Gogol "Surnud hinged"
Dramatiseeringu autor ja lavastaja Hendrik Toompere (Eesti Draamateater)
Kunstnik Pille Jänes
Osades: Priit Võigemast, Andres Raag, Rain Simmul, Piret Kalda, Kristjan Üksküla, Anne Reemann, Margus Tabor, Allan Noormets, Kalju Orro, Evelin Võigemast, Elisabet Reinsalu
Tallinna Linnateatri Taevalava
13.11.2014
Foto Siim Vahur
on the gate to the parade grounds at Fort Pulaski.
Scenes from Robert Redford's movie "The Conspirator" were filmed at this fort.
Jasmine - 2012 Classic Disney Princess 12'' Doll
Photographed boxed, during deboxing, and fully deboxed.
www.disneystore.com/classic-disney-princess-jasmine-doll-...
Description from US Disney Store website:
Classic Disney Princess Jasmine Doll -- 12'' H
Item No. 6070040908158P
Our Price: $14.50
2 for $22 Classic Dolls and Accessories
With her spectacular long black hair and sparkling gown, our classic Jasmine doll will turn every play time into a fairytale. Exotic jewelry adds glamour as the Sultan's daughter looks set to live ''happily ever after,'' with her beloved Aladdin.
Product Details
•Deluxe costume includes satin pants with organza layer with glitter detailing
•Glittering bodice features satin off the shoulder detailing
•Coordinated satin headband
•Gold earrings and matching necklace
•Poseable arms and legs
•Combines with our 12'' Classic Aladdin Doll and 12'' Classic Aladdin Genie Doll, sold separately
•Coordinates with Princess Jasmine Classic Doll Collection Accessory Set, sold separately
•Part of the Disney Princess Classic Doll Collection
•Plastic/polyester
•12'' H
•Ages 3+
•Imported
2012 Disney Princess Classic 12'' Dolls
By The Disney Store
First Look
Released June 25, 2012, Online (US site)
Purchased June 30, 2012, In Store
Scheduled release to Disney Stores: Second week of July (North America)
$14.50 US Each
2 for $22 US
The newly redesigned Disney Princess Classic 12'' Dolls, called the Disney Princess Classic Doll Collection. The Princess dolls now include the exciting fully articulated legs that were first introduced in the Classic Merida 11'' doll. They have external hinged knee joints and ball/hinge ankle joints that allow much greater poseability of the legs than the previous releases. The collection also includes the Prince dolls and Friends and Villains dolls (which currently includes King Triton, Charlotte, and Mother Gothel), and the Princess accessory (wardrobe) sets.
Each Princess doll has been redesigned, including the face, hairdo, outfit, articulation, and in some cases (apparently) the head mold.
The price of the dolls and accessory packs have increased from $12.50 US to $14.50. However, on June 26, 2012, the Disney Store has all of the dolls and accessory sets in the Disney Princess Classic Doll Collection as part of a 2 for $22 sale.
The 10 Princesses and their movies are:
Snow White (Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs, 1937)
Cinderella (Cinderella, 1950)
Aurora (Sleeping Beauty, 1959)
Ariel (The Little Mermaid, 1989)
Belle (Beauty and the Beast, 1991)
Jasmine (Aladdin, 1992)
Pocahontas (Pocahontas, 1995)
Mulan (Mulan, 1998)
Tiana (The Princess and the Frog, 2009)
Rapunzel (Tangled, 2010)
The new Princess dolls are photographed new in boxes, during their unboxing, and finally fully deboxed. They are also compared with other versions of the Disney Princess dolls.
Why build just one i8 if there is an option to build another one, but just make it convertible. So I did.
For those who didn't notice the first one - here's the album link: www.flickr.com/photos/the_rolic/albums/72157716803125113
And - what's best - it has instructions available now here: rebrickable.com/mocs/MOC-57837/Rolic/bmw-i8/#details
As the title states - it features retractable roof (loosing the space for rear seats).
For those who saw my blue i8 - remember I used the rigid hose to shape the door window frame and door hinge at the same time. Obviously - I couldn't use the same technique here as there is no window frame from end-to-end. There's just a small triangle. But!!!! With the help of few bar pieces and droid arms I could achieve everything I thought was impossible.
So I hope you like this one as much as I do. Let me know :)
I usually don't like super stretched limos.. I prefer the 6 passenger mildly stretched ones. They look a hell lot better. But I really like the 2 tone paint on this Lincoln limo.. The front looks quite accurate which most model makers tend to get the proportions quite off. I also like the door hinges on these, very realistic and the engine is unexpectedly detailed and very accurate. The trunk.. well it is big just like the real thing. It also steers and has suspension!. Oh and the interior is very detailed too, the rear seats are too upright. The wheels look good. Oh and the underbody is so much better than the 1:18 version I have. Surprisingly, the Lincoln hood ornament is so durable, I usually pull it to open the hood. Unlike the hood ornament on my 2011 Town Car 1:43 and the 1:18 2003 limo. Sunnyside did made a 1990 model which is sold as a 1996 model year and as far as I can tell, they look alright but the proportions are horrendous! I have a black one, but it is damaged. Might get a white one soon.
It is also a Signature trim Lincoln Town Car which is odd as most or just about every Stretched Town Cars uses the Executive trim level which is intended to be the less pricier Town Car and are targeted for livery use.
This is generally how it starts with restoration jobs. It's a bit worse for wear and needs some TLC to bring back to factory fresh condition. It is missing flap hinges, tail, one engine off and a bunch of dents and scratches.This is a solid resin travel agent display model which are generally well sought after. The engines are very basic and I have started to reshape. They will have new fans and tailpipes (remodelled from scratch) cast new flap hinge fairings and a whole bunch of other stuff. Because resin is relatively brittle I tend to 'pin' parts back on so they don't come off again, same way a dentist would pin teeth to your jaw.
Watch this space for progress. The plan is to finish up with a British Airways 'Poland' tails scheme, but let's see how we go with reconstruction first.
Best viewed large or original, right click and select large or original...to view on black, left click...
ID
3301
Listing Date
6 May 1976
History
A building in 3 sections. The earliest part is at the downhill end, which is said to incorporate a former C16 house, later converted to a public house. The central section is C19. The whole building was remodelled as a hotel in 1885 by Douglas & Fordham, architects of Chester. Douglas added a new section at the uphill end, and provided a new façade for the existing section, and for the separate public house. The building is shown in this form on the 1889 Ordnance Survey.
Exterior
A large Renaissance-style hotel built in 3 distinct sections, forming a long and asymmetrical front. At the downhill (L) end is a 1-bay, 3-storey former public house, then a central 4-bay 3-storey section under the same roof line and also adapted from an earlier building. At the uphill (R) end is the higher 1885 section, of 3 storeys and attic, and 3 bays. The front is faced in random small pieces of broken limestone to reproduce a flint-like effect, and has moulded brick dressings, bands and quoin with stone to entrance feature. The roof is slate. The R-hand section has a mansard roof to the front slope with 3 stone stacks, brick stack to the L and a further 2 stone stacks to the rear slope. The central and lower sections each have a brick stack on the L side.
The main entrance is in the L-hand bay of the uphill section,and has a 2-storey porch in ashlar red sandstone. It has engaged columns with strapwork above the bases and on the capitals. The doorway, with ovolo-moulded surround, has a keyed round arch and recessed panel doors under a wood-framed radial fanlight. The cornice incorporates relief foliage above the keystone, and above the columns are sculpted shield-bearing lions. Side walls have round-headed openings. The 1st floor mullioned window incorporates an oriel between outer single lights with flat ogee heads. The corbelling of the oriel incorporates a foliage frieze. The parapet has relief strapwork above the oriel, and above the outer lights 'Castle Hotel' in raised letters.
All other main windows are in moulded brick surrounds and incorporate flat ogee-headed lights and ovolo-moulded mullions and transoms, and are under moulded cornices. Second floor windows have relief cresting incorporating fleur-de-lis. In the entrance bay is a 3-light 2nd floor window under a Dutch gable with pinnacles. The 2nd bay of the uphill section has a shallow full-height bay window, narrower in the 2nd floor, with 4-light mullioned and transomed windows to ground and 1st floors, 3-light 2nd floor window under a Dutch gable. Between ground and first floors is a moulded brick strapwork panel incorporating the mirrored letter C and borough seals. The R-hand bay has a 2-storey canted bay window with 3-light mullioned and transomed windows, shorter to the 1st floor, and coped parapet with relief strapwork, and retaining one ball finial. The 2nd floor has a 3-light window under a Dutch gable, brought forward in the same manner as in the 2nd bay. Four flat roof dormers have small-pane windows.
The 4-bay asymmetrical central section has window details similar to the upper section. The bays differ in detail, but all have 2-light 2nd floor windows beneath the eaves. In its 1st bay at the downhill end, is an elliptical passage arch in red sandstone ashlar. The 1st floor has a cross window which, like the 2nd floor window above it, has 4-centred lights instead of the ogee heads on the other windows. The 2nd bay has a 2-storey canted bay window with 4-light mullioned and transomed windows, shorter in the 1st floor. It has a parapet with strapwork and pointed ball finials. In the 3rd bay is a ground-floor cross window under fleur-de-lis cresting, and another cross window to the 1st floor. In the 4th bay is a 3-light mullioned and transomed canted bay window under a parapet with strapwork and ball finials. The 1st floor has a 3-light mullioned and transomed window.
At the downhill end is a replacement C20 commercial front in the lower storey, framed by pilasters with end brackets and moulded cornice. It has a glazed door on the R, a 3-light window in the centre, and a former doorway to the L now a window. Openings have overlights and lights above transom, a later arched fascia, and a panelled stallboard. In the 1st floor an oriel window has a 2-light casement below the transom, above which is wood-mullioned small-pane glazing. The 2nd floor window has a freestone moulded sill. Its 4-light small-pane window has a broader central wooden mullion incorporating a bracket below a timber-framed gable with flower petals in pargetting. The gable has barge boards and finial.
The R gable end of the uphill section faces the passage to the churchyard and is pebble-dashed. It has superimposed 12-pane hornless sash windows lighting the stair. On the R, in the ground floor is a tripartite hornless sash window with 2-pane sash window to its R. The 1st and 2nd floors have 12-pane sash windows to the R side, which in the 1st floor is flanked by small 2-pane sashes.
The rear is more altered. The uphill section has small-pane sash windows and replacement windows in earlier openings, and a large added small-pane dormer on the L side. Also on its L side is a lower 2-storey L-shaped rear wing of cream-painted roughcast, with 3-window elevation to a small courtyard. It has sash windows and half-glazed escape door and stair. A large stack is in the angle. The gable end of the projecting section has double garage boarded doors with strap hinges, one also with louvres. Its 4-window rear wall faces the passage to the churchyard, of rubble stone and with a hipped roof to the angle. It has a 4-pane horned sash window and window to the R with gauze and thick wooden mullion and transom. The upper storey has three 12-pane horned sash windows in brick surrounds, and a further 4-pane horned sash window on the R side.
The central section has sash windows and replacement windows to the R and above an added 2½-storey gabled projection with modern detail. The wall is slate-hung above the passage at the downhill end. Inside the passage, of cream-painted scribed roughcast, are replacement half-glazed doors.
The downhill section is rubble stone and gabled, with external stack of 2 phases of brickwork above a pebble-dashed lower section. It is flanked by 4-pane sash windows and replacement window in brick surround. A 1½-storey wing has a 12-pane hornless sash window in the gable under a concrete lintel, and has a lean-to below. The side wall has a boarded door, and the main gabled section sash windows.
Interior
The entrance vestibule has a decorative tile floor and panelled dado. Half-glazed doors, framed by side lights and overlight, lead into the entrance hall. This incorporates 2 fixed painted panels signed 'JDW 1891', and in the style of Burne Jones. The hall leads to an axial corridor in the uphill section, at the upper end of which is a full-height open-well stair with plain balusters and wreathed handrail. On the 1st and 2nd floors the uphill section has axial corridors with panel doors to the rooms. Rooms in the central section are at a slightly lower level.
Reasons for Listing
Listed for its special architectural interest as a C19 commercial building, with earlier origins, of definite character, with well-preserved and distinctive late C19 detail to the front, and for group value within the historical townscape.
britishlistedbuildings.co.uk/300003301-castle-hotel-conwy...
Iron hinge on a church door in Welshpool, Wales.
Taken with Panasonic 20mm f1.7 lens on Panasonic GX7.
This is a single Magic-Cube consits of 12 individual Pyramids. Each one connected on two sides and carrying rare-earth magnets to help stabilize the major structures. A single Cube has 36 magnets. There are 5 major shapes that will „fall into place“, meaning the magnets will pull it together and no hinge is left flexible. As a toy the Cube posesses the challenge of a Riddle to unlock the different Shapes or to find the paths of shortest movement between them. As Art it can be left Standing, or with the supplied Wallmount, be displayed as a hanging Object. The beauty of this dissection, displayed in Numbers, are the different sidelengths of a Single Pyramid. Namely: One, Sqareroot of Two and Half Squareroot of Three.
Want to see the transformation of a single Magic Geocube? Go to vimeo.com/user23706515/geobender/geocubes/surfer_single
Would you like to see more Magic Geocubes? You want to buy one or more? Go to www.GeoBender.com
"This house was modernized in 1770."
Edvard Grieg's summer house.
Bergen, Norway
(March 9, 2015)
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