View allAll Photos Tagged locking
I got a shipment today of locking tuners that I'm planning to offer as an upgrade on the guitars. Pretty nice.
The bottom lock at Pontnewydd, where the canal emerges from the culvert from Commercial Street. On the right, the sluice gate which once housed the paddle gear, and the solid iron lock gate support. The canal ceased to be navigable through Cwmbran by at least the 1950s.
And then...just when we thought that seeing the adult plovers was treat enough (we saw several), the chicks came out from the dune grass and put on a show! Plover chicks are very precocious--they can't fly, so their parents keep them close, but they can feed themselves. They dart along and dash around so fast, that it's almost impossible to get a focus lock on them--well, at least it was for this amateur Can't wait to try again next season. Godspeed little plover...
Single raw image processed thru Lightroom and Photoshop,Taken on the London Google+ photowalk Kings cross St Pancras area london
TCC Print
Kilmainham Gaol is a former prison, located in Kilmainham in Dublin, which is now a museum. It has been run since the mid-1980s by the Office of Public Works (O.P.W.), an Irish Government agency.
Edmund Wellisha, the head guard at the prison, was convicted of undernourishing prisoners in support of the rebellion.
Kilmainham Gaol played an important part in Irish history, as many leaders of Irish rebellions were imprisoned and some executed in the prison by the British and latterly in 1923 by the Irish Free State.
When it was first built in 1796, Kilmainham Gaol was called the 'New Gaol' to distinguish it from the old gaol it was intended to replace - a noisome dungeon, just a few hundred yards from the present site. It was officially called the County of Dublin Gaol, and was originally run by the Grand Jury for County Dublin. Over the 128 years it served as a prison, its cells held many of the most famous people involved in the campaign for Irish independence. The British imprisoned and executed the leaders of the 1916 Easter Rising here.
Source: Wikipedia
National Conference League Premier Division club Lock Lane issued this 16-page programme (£2.50, with admission) for a January 2019 Challenge Cup first round tie with 2018 All Ireland champions Longhorns, from Ashbourne, County Meath. In front of 300 spectators, Castleford-based Lock Lane, reduced to 12 players by a 70th-minute red card for an unduly aggressive challenge, clung on for a barely deserved 16-10 victory.
Lock Nuts can also be known as shaft nuts or withdrawal nuts depending on their use. They are used to securely locate bearings and other components onto shafts as well as facilitate the mounting of taper bore bearings onto shafts with the use of adaptor sleeves or withdrawal sleeves.
Looking down the Gatun Lock set in the Panama Canal. This view is looking out towards the Caribbean on the north side of the Canal.
Children's tricycle locked to a pole on Capitol Hill, Washington, DC
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Blogged by The Hill is Home ("Hill’s Eye View: Bike to School Day Coming Up May 8th" by Kate McFadden - May 1, 2013) at www.thehillishome.com/2013/05/hills-eye-view-bike-to-scho...
Blogged by Greater Greater Washington ("Family Biking Matters: Locking it up" by Sava Tshontikidis - October 7, 2024) at ggwash.org/view/97190/family-biking-matters-locking-it-up
Locked Signs logo created by design and btl agency Paparaci.
Šokių grupės "Locked Signs" logotipas sukurtas dizaino ir netradicinės reklamos agentūros Paparaci.
Llanthony Lock - was built in 1871, to allow boats passing up and down the River Severn avoid the new weir just south of here. The weir was constructed to ensure a minimum depth of six feet in the river above Gloucester. The lock was closed in 1924 due to the walls moving.
This is the footbridge over the River Severn, allowing access to the Lock House.
The area is being restored by the Hereford & Gloucester Canal Trust, and currently the only public access is the footpath through the lock itself!
© Mike Broome. Please contact thro Flickr if you want to use this photo.
The first snap guns were developed to assist police officers in opening locks without the additional training required for traditional lock picking techniques. Lock pick guns are a popular method used today for quick and easy ways of opening doors.
The lock pick gun is also called snap gun or electric lock pick and used for inexperienced people. People can open locks using lock pick gun although they have less knowledge about lock picking.