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Networked Fabrication for Urban Provocations.
Shifting Paradigms from Mass Production to Mass Customization
Computational architecture and design course
Conventional construction methods all depart from the basic premises of mass production: standardization, modulation and a production line. What these systems developed during the last two centuries fail to take into account are the evolutionary leaps and bounds the manufacturing industry has taken over the last decades. With the introduction of CNC technologies and rapid prototyping machines have altered the paradigms of fabrication forever. It is due to these new tools that it is now possible to create (n) amount of completely unique and different pieces with the same amount of energy and material that is required to create (n) identical pieces. The possibilities for implementation of new forms, textures, materials and languages are infinite due to the versatility that these new tools offer a growing network of architects, designers, fabricators that are integrating them into their professional practices to generate unique and precise objects that respond to countless data and real-life conditions.
Instructors:
Monika Wittig [ LaN, IaaC ]
Shane Salisbury [ LaN, IaaC ]
Filippo Moroni [ SOLIDO, Politecnico di Milano ]
MS Josh Updyke [ Advanced Manufacturing Institute, KSU, Protei ]
Aaron Gutiérrez Cortes [ Amorphica ]
TNS 400 serie Servo Motor is designed to meet almost all basic light duty requirements of various commercial sewing machines, including lockstitch sewing machines, overlock sewing machines and interlock sewing machines. It utilizes Ferrite permanent magnets.The motor produces almost no noise, saves energy (60-80%) and is brushless, speed djustable and durable. It provides a high starting torque even at low speed or from a complete stop. By using a modern technologically advanced microprocessor,Hall sensor and Pulse-Width Modulation technology,the TNS400 series motor can be set to rotate at different maximum speeds, in either normal or reverse directions, and can start with different accelerating speeds. It will stop automatically with any interruption such as in-line voltage, electrical surge, radio frequency interference or overloading. It is fully protected by the software and will give error messages indicating which problem is encountered. It even works well in environments with an unstable electrical power supply.
Features:
Features & Settings:
1.Motor rotating direction setting
2.Slow starting speed
3.Maximum speed setting
Supplied with:
1.Instruction manual / parts list
2.Mounting hardware
3.Pulley cover (belt guard)
4.65mm pulley
5.Push-button on/off wire harness
Specification:
1.110V Singe Phase
2.Cycles: 50/60
3.Variable Speed to 5000 RPM
4.Power: Up to 1000W
Application:
All kinds of lockstitch sewing machines, overlock sewing machines and interlock sewing machines.
Ogundipe Fayomi's monument for Dr. Ronald Erwin McNair (1950–1986) combines a traditional bust with a uniquely shaped pedestal. McNair was the African-American astronaut, physicist, teacher, and musician who died aboard the Space Shuttle Challenger when it exploded on January 28, 1986.
This park, formerly known as Guider Park, was named for Dr. McNair in the same year as the Challenger disaster. The City’s Department of Cultural Affairs sponsored a competition through its Percent-for-Art program to choose an artist to create a central sculpture. They ultimately selected the Nigerian-born sculptor Fayomi, who fashioned a sensitive bronze portrait, set within a nine-foot tall polished red-granite pedestal resembling a modified rocket ship. The pyramidal base features bronze relief with images relating to Dr. McNair’s achievements and interests.
Dr. McNair was born on October 21, 1950, in Lake City, South Carolina. He graduated from Carver High School in Lake City in 1967, and received a B.S. degree in physics from North Carolina A & T State University in 1971. In 1976, Dr. McNair completed his Ph.D. in physics at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT). After graduating from MIT, Dr. McNair was employed as a staff physicist at Hughes Research Laboratories in Malibu, California. His work there involved developing lasers for isotope separation and photochemistry, using non-linear interactions in low-temperature liquids. He also conducted research on electro-optic laser modulation for satellite-to-satellite space communications and explored the scientific foundations of the martial arts. A member of numerous scientific organizations and a visiting lecturer in physics at Texas Southern University, Dr. McNair also taught karate as a fifth-degree black belt and was a performing jazz saxophonist.
In 1978, the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) selected Dr. McNair as an astronaut candidate. He completed his training the following year, and became eligible as a mission specialist astronaut on Space Shuttle flight crews. He first flew as a mission specialist on Mission STS-41-B on February 3, 1984, which featured the first untethered spacewalk. Serving as a mission specialist on Mission STS-51-L, his life was tragically cut short when the space shuttle exploded one minute and 13 seconds into the launch. After his death, the Dr. Ronald E. McNair Foundation for Science, Technology & Space Education was established in Atlanta, Georgia.
When this monument was dedicated on June 14, 1994, family, friends, former colleagues, community representatives, city officials and hundreds of school children gathered in memory of Dr. McNair’s legacy. The monument and the park, which was renovated at the time of the sculpture’s installation, evoke a mood in keeping with Dr. McNair’s wish inscribed on the pedestal. It reads, “that we should allow this planet to be the beautiful oasis that she is, and allow ourselves to live more in the peace she generates.”
12 Interlocking Irregular Hyperboloidal Dodecahedra 360 units
3-fold view.
Following an initial prototype with only a singular unit type which attempted a hexahedral symmetry analog of 30 Dodecahedra, I developed this more nuanced version, which has a different exterior weaving pattern and multiple paper proportions. However, as a constraint, I attempted to use only one pocket type for all of the units. This makes some vertices different than others in terms of the dihedral angles of the surrounding units, but the edges shafts are long enough to accommodate modulation between vertices without appreciable difficulty in most cases. This is constructed via scaffolding so that each dodecahedron represents one edge of a cube. The resulting compound is at the time of writing this, the largest interlocking origami cubic symmetry wireframe compound by unit count that I know of.
Designed by me.
Folded out of Cordenons’ Stardream paper.
Networked Fabrication for Urban Provocations.
Shifting Paradigms from Mass Production to Mass Customization
Computational architecture and design course
Conventional construction methods all depart from the basic premises of mass production: standardization, modulation and a production line. What these systems developed during the last two centuries fail to take into account are the evolutionary leaps and bounds the manufacturing industry has taken over the last decades. With the introduction of CNC technologies and rapid prototyping machines have altered the paradigms of fabrication forever. It is due to these new tools that it is now possible to create (n) amount of completely unique and different pieces with the same amount of energy and material that is required to create (n) identical pieces. The possibilities for implementation of new forms, textures, materials and languages are infinite due to the versatility that these new tools offer a growing network of architects, designers, fabricators that are integrating them into their professional practices to generate unique and precise objects that respond to countless data and real-life conditions.
Instructors:
Monika Wittig [ LaN, IaaC ]
Shane Salisbury [ LaN, IaaC ]
Filippo Moroni [ SOLIDO, Politecnico di Milano ]
MS Josh Updyke [ Advanced Manufacturing Institute, KSU, Protei ]
Aaron Gutiérrez Cortes [ Amorphica ]
Microbiology Test Piece Medi-Ca of DNP Medi·Ca Culture Dish Media
Make food microbiological testing much easier and more effective
Compared with the agar medium, our bacterial culture media plate makes the detection of food microorganisms easier, more standardized, and more efficient, but without pollution.
1. Culture media ready to be used after opening;
2. Colonies easy to see;
3. Reduce the culture area and waste.
Notes
1) The product is used for the microbiological examination of foods and beverages, and cannot be used clinically.
2) Do not open the tectorial membrane before transplanting the sample.
3) Do not use expired products.
4) Do not use products that are damaged, deformed, discolored, dirty, or foreign matters.
5) Do not expose the product to ultraviolet light or sunlight.
6) Do not press the film after the sample liquid is dropped. This will cause the sample solution to overflow to the outside of the culture area.
7) When the sample solution overflows from the culture area, replace it with a new one.
8) If the product enters the eye or mouth, immediately wash it with water and go to the hospital.
9) When using the product, it is susceptible to microbial contamination. Perform specific operations under the guidance of relevant qualified personnel.
10) Please note that the sample or the product that has been in contact with the sample liquid is a contaminated item.
Preservation method
Keep in cold storage (2~8°C), fold it twice at the opening of the bag after breaking, and fix it with tape.
Validity period
The validity period of the product is written on the aluminum bag and the upper part of the product (the date described after "EXP" is the validity period). Please use the aluminum bag within 3 months after opening.
Abandonment method
The product has a risk of secondary pollution after use. Therefore, after proper sterilization, it should be disposed of according to the waste standards of the respective samples and related facilities.
Guarantee responsibility
When the product defect is obvious, replace the corresponding quantity with the new product. The judgment and application of the inspection results are the user’s responsibility, and the manufacturing company and the agent of the product are exempt from liability.
Quantity per carton
Medi-Ca AC and Medi-Ca CC: 1000 sheets
Medi-Ca EC and Medi-Ca SA: 500 sheets
Performance Characteristics of DNP Medi·Ca Culture Dish Media
Medium ready to be used after opening
The product does not require pre-modulation and autoclaving, just check it. No need for mixed release. Double layer coverage is easy to operate which will improve working efficiency.
Colonies easy to see
Due to the use of the color former, the colonies are clearly visible and easy to discriminate. It is beneficial to improve the working efficiency of counting bacteria and working standardization. In addition, since Medi-Ca AC is a bacillus, it is one of the characteristics that the coloring penetration is relatively small.
Reduce the culture area and waste
Compared with the culture dish, it can be reduced to about 1/15~1/20, which can reduce the storage space and the waste after use.
Variety introduction
The Culture Media Plate Medi-Ca is not considered for personal visual differences but produced according to the coloring universal design that most people can easily see, and is also certified by the NPO corporate coloring general design agency.
Usage Method of DNP Medi·Ca Culture Dish Media
1. Sample liquid preparation
Add appropriate sterile dilutions to the sample and homogenize with a homogenizer.
2.Pipetting into the culture area
3.Culture
Put into the incubator, the product can overlap up to 25 pieces.
4.Judgment
SA uses chromogenic enzymes to easily determine and count bacteria.
When the bacteria number is large, please perform statistics in the grid on the film (1cm × 1cm).
Multiply the bacteria number in a grid by the total grids number
5. Fishing for colonies which can be re-cultured
Remove the bacteria by opening the membrane.
Colony Count System
By using the colony counting system (dedicated scanner and application), high-resolution images can be analyzed, and automatic counting and inspection result image storage management can be realized in a short time, which can improve the counting efficiency.
Tear off the foil pouch and remove the required amount.
Medium TypeCulture temperatureCulture time
Media-Ca AC
(Measurement of general bacteria amount)35 ± 1 ℃48±2 hours
Media-Ca CC
(Measurement of Coliforms)35 ± 1 ℃24±1 hours
Media-Ca EC
(Measurement of Escherichia coli and Coliforms)35 ± 1 ℃24±1 hours
Media-Ca SA
(Measurement of Staphylococcus)35 ± 1 ℃24±1 hours
28th February 2015 at Half Moon, Putney, London SW5.
Effects Pedals modify the sound of a musical instrument such as an Electric Guitar by means of changes like distortion, modulation, and feedback. They are often found on the floor on a pedalboard, and are operated with the feet.
The photo includes (top to bottom): Boss Chromatic Tuner TU-2, Boss Delay DM-3 (a 1980s analog delay pedal), Durham Electronics Zia Drive (an overdrive pedal, which distorts the wave form of the audio signal) and Danelectro Tuna Melt (a tremelo pedal).
Networked Fabrication for Urban Provocations.
Shifting Paradigms from Mass Production to Mass Customization
Computational architecture and design course
Conventional construction methods all depart from the basic premises of mass production: standardization, modulation and a production line. What these systems developed during the last two centuries fail to take into account are the evolutionary leaps and bounds the manufacturing industry has taken over the last decades. With the introduction of CNC technologies and rapid prototyping machines have altered the paradigms of fabrication forever. It is due to these new tools that it is now possible to create (n) amount of completely unique and different pieces with the same amount of energy and material that is required to create (n) identical pieces. The possibilities for implementation of new forms, textures, materials and languages are infinite due to the versatility that these new tools offer a growing network of architects, designers, fabricators that are integrating them into their professional practices to generate unique and precise objects that respond to countless data and real-life conditions.
Instructors:
Monika Wittig [ LaN, IaaC ]
Shane Salisbury [ LaN, IaaC ]
Filippo Moroni [ SOLIDO, Politecnico di Milano ]
MS Josh Updyke [ Advanced Manufacturing Institute, KSU, Protei ]
Aaron Gutiérrez Cortes [ Amorphica ]
The peony is named after Paeon (also spelled Paean), a student of Asclepius, the Greek god of medicine and healing. Asclepius became jealous of his pupil; Zeus saved Paeon from the wrath of Asclepius by turning him into the peony flower.
Over 262 compounds have been obtained so far from the plants of Paeoniaceae. These include monoterpenoid glucosides, flavonoids, tannins, stilbenes, triterpenoids and steroids, paeonols, and phenols. Biological Activities include Antioxidant, Antitumor, Antipathogenic, Immune-System-Modulation Activities,Cardiovascular-System-Protective Activities and Central-Nervous-System Activities.
CNC milled tree trunk from Linden wood based on a form modeled in 3D. Milled at the HfG Offenbach with the kind assistance of Mr. Wolfgang Heide. Digital image taken at the exhibition "Natur-Struktur" in March-April 2008 in Frankfurt am Main, Germany.
The Dirty Carter Electronic Sound Generating Instrument was designed by John Richards (Dirty Electronics) and Chris Carter from legendary Industrial pioneers Throbbing Gristle. It was produced for a special performance by Carter and the 25 strong Dirty Electronics Ensemble in 2010. It was originally designed as a touch controlled instrument with the player's skin resistance completing the circuit. This hard wired modification by A.S.M.O. gives more control and predictability by wiring all to the touch contacts to pots and switches. An additional low pass resonant filter has been added, LFO and an external CV socket for filter modulation.
The case is made of stained ply and the front panel is covered with black leatherette.
Orange Juice Drive is in a classical RAT type circuit and sounding topolgy. We add extra switch for select between symmetric or asymmetric clipping. Not operable with battery.
I've not found the correct 9 volt battery for this yet, but it does play when I apply 9 volts to the terminals.
Group 4_
Aaron Onchi, Betty Sanchez, Roberto Gutierrez, Frank Durán , Belén Olaya García
Networked Fabrication for Urban Provocations.
Shifting Paradigms from Mass Production to Mass Customization
Computational architecture and design course
Conventional construction methods all depart from the basic premises of mass production: standardization, modulation and a production line. What these systems developed during the last two centuries fail to take into account are the evolutionary leaps and bounds the manufacturing industry has taken over the last decades. With the introduction of CNC technologies and rapid prototyping machines have altered the paradigms of fabrication forever. It is due to these new tools that it is now possible to create (n) amount of completely unique and different pieces with the same amount of energy and material that is required to create (n) identical pieces. The possibilities for implementation of new forms, textures, materials and languages are infinite due to the versatility that these new tools offer a growing network of architects, designers, fabricators that are integrating them into their professional practices to generate unique and precise objects that respond to countless data and real-life conditions.
Instructors:
Monika Wittig [ LaN, IaaC ]
Shane Salisbury [ LaN, IaaC ]
Filippo Moroni [ SOLIDO, Politecnico di Milano ]
MS Josh Updyke [ Advanced Manufacturing Institute, KSU, Protei ]
Aaron Gutiérrez Cortes [ Amorphica ]
Al Centro DINO CAMPANA non si scherza.. e si spazia anche sul SANITARIO……Donne in primo piano.. ed i Progressi della ONCOLOGIA
Stefano Tamberi
Professore a contratto a titolo gratuito
Scuola di Medicina e Chirurgia
Curriculum Vitae
Nato il 26 giugno 1967, ha conseguito la laurea in Medicina e Chirurgia nel 1992 con 110 e lode presso L'Università di Bologna. Nel 1997 si è specializzato in Oncologia con 70 e lode presso l'Università di Bologna e consegue nel 2001 il dottorato di ricerca in Oncologia Gastrointestinale presso l'Università di Modena e Reggio Emilia. Vincitore dei premi "E.Baroni" e "Evaristo Stefanelli" per la ricerca in oncologia presso l'Università di Bologna negli A.A 1997 e 1998. Dal 2010 è direttore dell'UO di Oncologia dell'Ospedale di Faenza.
Le principali aree di ricerca clinica oncologica sono state nel corso degli anni la patologia oncologica polmonare, gastrointestinale e ginecologica. Membro attivo dei principali gruppi di ricerca nazionali e internazionali di tali ambiti (Gruppo MITO, Gynecologic cancer tergroup, GISCAD etc) è stato principal investigator di numerosi studi internazionali sui tumori dell'ovaio, del polmone e dei tumori del colon.
Ha sviluppato negli ultimi anni un interesse particolare perl'approccio psico-sociale al paziente oncologico con un periodo di visita presso le principali istituzioni del Quebec (Canada) per lo sviluppo di un processo organizzativo di cure oncologiche centrate sul paziente. Ha sviluppato progetti di supporto clinico psiconcologico a pazienti affette da carcinoma mammario operato con l'istituzione di supporto psicologico di gruppo e la consulenza psicologica prevista nella quotidiana attività clinica. Tali progetti pilota sono stai presentati nell'ambito del progetto "Empatia" della Regione Emilia Romagna (RER). Ha partecipato al corso regionale sulla "Health Literacy" tenuto dalla Prof.ssa Rudd (Harvard - Boston) e ha sviluppato progetti innovativi di comunicazione nel personale medico e infermieristico da lui diretto.
Alcune sue Pubblicazioni
1. Carboplatin, Fluorouracil and L-Folinic Acid in the treatment of Advanced Squamous Cell Carcinoma of the Head and Neck (SCCHN) . Guaraldi M., Martoni A., Morelli F., Panetta A., Tamberi S., Pannuti F. Annals of Oncology 5 (suppl.8):123,1994
2. A phase I-II study on 5-day 5-Fluorouracil continuous infusion with levo-Folinic Acid modulation in advanced colo-rectal cancer. Martoni A., Angelelli B., Panetta A., Tamberi S., Pannuti F. Proceedings of the "XVI International Cancer Congress". New Delhi 30 ottobre-5 novembre 1994
3. Combined chemo-immuno-ormonotherapy of advanced renal cell carcinoma. Panetta A., Martoni A., Guaraldi M., Tamberi S., Casadio M., Lelli G., Pannuti F. Journal of Chemotherapy 6:5,349-353, 1994
4. Prevalenza e caratteristiche morfologiche di lesioni polipoidi del tratto digestivo superiore nella poliposi adenomatosa familiare. Santucci R., Volpe L., Calabrese C., Poggi B., Di Febo G., Tamberi S., Biasco G. "I Tumori gastrici. Bilanci e prospettive" Roma 9-11 novembre 1995
5. Terapia cronomodulata dei tumori solidi. Biasco G., Brandi G., Tamberi S. G.Biasco. "Trials clinici in oncologia". Bologna, 1995
6. Abnormal mucosal cell proliferation as a biomarker of gastrointestinal cancer: methodological issues and clinical applications Biasco G., G.M.Paganelli, U.Zannoni, G.Brandi, R.Santucci, M.Renga, P.Mordenti, S.Tamberi, L.Barbara. Journal of tumor marker oncology vol.10 ,2, pag.89, 1995
Group 4_
Aaron Onchi, Betty Sanchez, Roberto Gutierrez, Frank Durán , Belén Olaya García
Networked Fabrication for Urban Provocations.
Shifting Paradigms from Mass Production to Mass Customization
Computational architecture and design course
Conventional construction methods all depart from the basic premises of mass production: standardization, modulation and a production line. What these systems developed during the last two centuries fail to take into account are the evolutionary leaps and bounds the manufacturing industry has taken over the last decades. With the introduction of CNC technologies and rapid prototyping machines have altered the paradigms of fabrication forever. It is due to these new tools that it is now possible to create (n) amount of completely unique and different pieces with the same amount of energy and material that is required to create (n) identical pieces. The possibilities for implementation of new forms, textures, materials and languages are infinite due to the versatility that these new tools offer a growing network of architects, designers, fabricators that are integrating them into their professional practices to generate unique and precise objects that respond to countless data and real-life conditions.
Instructors:
Monika Wittig [ LaN, IaaC ]
Shane Salisbury [ LaN, IaaC ]
Filippo Moroni [ SOLIDO, Politecnico di Milano ]
MS Josh Updyke [ Advanced Manufacturing Institute, KSU, Protei ]
Aaron Gutiérrez Cortes [ Amorphica ]
Group 4_
Aaron Onchi, Betty Sanchez, Roberto Gutierrez, Frank Durán , Belén Olaya García
Networked Fabrication for Urban Provocations.
Shifting Paradigms from Mass Production to Mass Customization
Computational architecture and design course
Conventional construction methods all depart from the basic premises of mass production: standardization, modulation and a production line. What these systems developed during the last two centuries fail to take into account are the evolutionary leaps and bounds the manufacturing industry has taken over the last decades. With the introduction of CNC technologies and rapid prototyping machines have altered the paradigms of fabrication forever. It is due to these new tools that it is now possible to create (n) amount of completely unique and different pieces with the same amount of energy and material that is required to create (n) identical pieces. The possibilities for implementation of new forms, textures, materials and languages are infinite due to the versatility that these new tools offer a growing network of architects, designers, fabricators that are integrating them into their professional practices to generate unique and precise objects that respond to countless data and real-life conditions.
Instructors:
Monika Wittig [ LaN, IaaC ]
Shane Salisbury [ LaN, IaaC ]
Filippo Moroni [ SOLIDO, Politecnico di Milano ]
MS Josh Updyke [ Advanced Manufacturing Institute, KSU, Protei ]
Aaron Gutiérrez Cortes [ Amorphica ]
Sample image taken with a Fujinon XF 56mm f1.2 R mounted on a Fujifilm XT1 body; each of these images is an out-of-camera JPEG with Lens Modulation Optimisation enabled. These samples and comparisons are part of my Fujinon XF 56mm f1.2 R review at:
cameralabs.com/reviews/Fujifilm_Fujinon_XF_56mm_f1-2_R/
Feel free to download the original image for evaluation on your own computer or printer, but please don't use it on another website or publication without permission from www.cameralabs.com/
2 RED LFOs and a Proto of the GREEN SEQ (here in black as the green Plexi didnt make it in time...)
all running Temposynchron, the left LFO modulating PWM, the 2nd modulating Filter Cutoff, the Sequencer OSC Frequency (via a Quantizer).
You cant imagine how much fun it is just to step thru the LFO Waveforms and adjust the PhaseShift for the Filter Modulation......
The first commercially available synth to implement MIDI!! It's a fun synth. Its big brother is the legendary Prophet 5. The P600 is very affordable today and is a great buy. Models with the newest software will enjoy polyphonic MIDI implementation and up to 100 memory patches to store their own sounds! The sound of the Prophet 600 is brighter and harsher than that of a Juno 106 but still just as funky.
The P600 has two oscillators per voice with sawtooth, triangle and variable pulse waveforms. The oscillators can be individually tuned or synced together. Similar quality VCF and VCA sections from the Prophet 5 can be found here too! The P5's Poly-Mod section has also been passed onto the P600.
The P600 is extremely versatile and easy to use! Its best functions include the onboard arpeggiator, 2-track sequencer and poly-modulation. The P600 is great for creating analog effects, swells and drones. It has a cool glide effect and has very flexible modulation possibilities!
Please visit www.winecountrysequential.com for spare parts and software upgrades.
An infographic detailing the history of guitar effects, starting all the way back to the 1930s with Rickenbacker’s Vibrola Spanish Guitar and progressing to the present day. Along the way, we’ll see iconic guitar-effect breakthroughs like gain and reverb in the 1940s to 1950s’ effects like fuzz (discovered by accidentally dropping a Fender Bass amp on a rainy street!) and distortion (the fortuitous discovery when Link Wray stabbed a hole in his amp’s speaker). The guitar effects hit their stride in the 1960s with the first transistor-powered guitar pedals, including the first wah-wah pedals and the first octave effect pedal among glorious others. The explosion of effects pedals in the 1970s reverberates today: signal alterations, distortion, modulation, time-based effects, and filter effects. A timeline of all these effects along with the iconic musicians who used what—Bo Diddley’s Trem Trol 800 Tremolo, Jimi Hendrix’s Leslie rotating speaker, the Rolling Stones’ Maestro Fuzz Tone, etc.
Feel free to use this infographic but please give credit with a link to www.songsimian.com. The original infographic, with embed codes, can be found here.
The red side button was transplanted from the original two-way radio. It turns on the "robot" pseudo ring modulation.
Most recently dug out of the basement from the radio boxes, a citizen's band transceiver; it provides AM, USB and LSB operating modes over the usual 40 channels. It can be modified to do more, but that's not of interest to me. It has very good audio quality on both receive and transmit, and enough capabilities that along with a good antenna, any reasonable communications scenario can be addressed.
Notable are three different types of noise reduction; instant access to channels 9 and 19 without disturbing the main dial; courtesy beep; RF gain; RF power; tone; SWR, power and modulation metering; transmit monitoring; full panel dimming; and PA capability, which will be useful to us as a quick way to address the back yard, as we have no windows back there, only cameras.
Canon EOS 50D [modified IR response in Hα range], Canon EF-S 18-55mm ƒ/3.5-5.6 IS zoom [ø58mm] @ 23mm, tripod, IS off, available light (indirect sunlight through closed opaque blinds), ƒ/3.5, ISO 100, 2.5s exp. Taken in SRAW; this is a 1:1 clip.
Networked Fabrication for Urban Provocations.
Shifting Paradigms from Mass Production to Mass Customization
Computational architecture and design course
Conventional construction methods all depart from the basic premises of mass production: standardization, modulation and a production line. What these systems developed during the last two centuries fail to take into account are the evolutionary leaps and bounds the manufacturing industry has taken over the last decades. With the introduction of CNC technologies and rapid prototyping machines have altered the paradigms of fabrication forever. It is due to these new tools that it is now possible to create (n) amount of completely unique and different pieces with the same amount of energy and material that is required to create (n) identical pieces. The possibilities for implementation of new forms, textures, materials and languages are infinite due to the versatility that these new tools offer a growing network of architects, designers, fabricators that are integrating them into their professional practices to generate unique and precise objects that respond to countless data and real-life conditions.
Instructors:
Monika Wittig [ LaN, IaaC ]
Shane Salisbury [ LaN, IaaC ]
Filippo Moroni [ SOLIDO, Politecnico di Milano ]
MS Josh Updyke [ Advanced Manufacturing Institute, KSU, Protei ]
Aaron Gutiérrez Cortes [ Amorphica ]
Woodcut; 11 x 14 in.
Julian Stanczak is an American painter and printmaker. The artist lives and works in Seven Hills, Ohio with his wife, the sculptor, Barbara Stanczak. He was born in eastern Poland in 1928. At the beginning of World War II, Stanczak was forced into a Siberian labor camp, where he permanently lost the use of his right arm. He had been right-handed. In 1942, aged thirteen, Stanczak escaped from Siberia to join the Polish army-in-exile in Persia. After deserting from the army, he spent his teenage years in a hut in a Polish refugee camp in Uganda. In Africa Stanczak learned to write and paint left-handed. He then spend some years in London, before moving to the United States in 1950. He settled in Cleveland, Ohio. Stanczak received his Bachelor of Fine Arts degree from the Cleveland Institute of Art, Cleveland Ohio in 1954, and then trained under Josef Albers and Conrad Marca-Relli at the Yale University, School of Art and Architecture, New Haven, where he received his Master of Fine Arts in 1956.
In 2007, Stanczak was interviewed by Brian Sherwin for Myartspace. During the interview Stanczak recalled his experiences with war and the loss of his right arm and how both influenced his art. Stanczak explained, "The transition from using my left hand as my right, main hand, was very difficult. My youthful experiences with the atrocities of the Second World War are with me,- but I wanted to forget them and live a "normal" life and adapt into society more fully. In the search for Art, you have to separate what is emotional and what is logical. I did not want to be bombarded daily by the past,- I looked for anonymity of actions through non-referential, abstract art.
The Op Art movement was named for his first major show, Julian Stanczak: Optical Paintings, held at the Martha Jackson Gallery in New York in 1964. His work was included in the Museum of Modern Art's 1965 exhibition The Responsive Eye. In 1966 he was named a "New Talent" by Art in America magazine. In the early 1960s he began to make the surface plane of the painting vibrate through his use of wavy lines and contrasting colors in works such as Provocative Current (1965). These paintings gave way to more complex compositions constructed with geometric rigidity yet softened with varying degrees of color transparency such as Netted Green (1972). In addition to being an artist, Stanczak was also a teacher, having worked at the Art Academy of Cincinnati from 1957–64 and as Professor of Painting, at the Cleveland Institute of Art, 1964-1995. He was named "Outstanding American Educator" by the Educators of America in 1970.
Stanczak uses repeating forms to create compositions that are manifestations of his visual experiences. Stanczak's work is an art of experience, and is based upon structures of color. In the 1980s and 1990s Stanczak retained his geometric structure and created compositions with bright or muted colors, often creating pieces in a series such as Soft Continuum (1981; Johnson and Johnson Co. CT, see McClelland pl. 50). More recently, Stanczak has been creating large-scale series, consisting of square panels on which he examines variations of hue and chroma in illusionistic color modulations, an example of which is Windows to the Past (2000; 50 panels).
WORMOD Art 330 : By passing from a basic design with various effects and modulations, a Kaleidoscopic Chrominance is obtained.
The title “Unitxt” could be read as “unit extended” referring to a unit of a rhythmic grid or universal text referring to a universal language, e.g. mathematics: units, constants, measurements, prefix-, SI-system of units and is represented in spoken word and by codes in sound itself.
In collaboration with derivative’s touch designer software the original visuals, which are based on real-time manipulation/modulation of software-generated test patterns, has been expanded to a multi-screen set-up with a highly elaborated visual outfit to form an installation of an almost immersive quality.
This special set-up has been developed for more large scale venues and festivals of high demand. So far it has had presentations at Transmediale Berlin, followed by shows at Mutek Montréal and Sonár Barcelona.
credit: rubra
Specification
Coach Model MAN 18.350 HOCL/R
Chassis Length 11,850 mm
Chassis Width 2,526 mm
GVW 18,200 kg
Engine Type
Vertical, Water Cooled 6-cylinder 4-stroke Diesel Engine
With Common Rail Injection,
Exhaust Turbocharger and Intercooler
ECR, Replaceable Cylinders Liners
Engine Model MAN D2066 LUH13 Euro 4
Displacement 10,518 c.c
Maximum Output 257 kW (350 hp) @ 1,700 rpm
Maximum Torque 1,750 Nm @ 1,000-1,400 rpm
Bore 120 mm
Stroke 155 mm
Fuel Capacity 300 dm³
Transmission ZF 6S 1900 BO 6-speed Synchromesh Manual Transmission
ZF 6 HP 504C 6-speed Automatic Transmission
Voith D864.5 4-speed Automatic Transmission
Drive Axle MAN HY-1336-B
Suspension Capacity 13,000 kg
Front Axle MAN V9-82 SL
Suspension Capacity 8,200 kg
Brake
Dual Circuit Air Brake System to ADR Directives by Wabco
Front and Rear Axle Disc Brakes
Electronic brake system EBS (ABS, TCS)
Auxiliary Brake Manual Transmission: Engine Brake Valve (EBV)
Automatic Transmission: Integrated Retarder and
Water Cooled with Electric Pressure Modulation
Suspension
Air suspension with 6 identical rolling seals
With Integrated Elastic Stroke Limiter
Electronically Controlled Constant Entrance Height
Suspension Characteristics Under All Load Conditions
Front Suspension 2 x Air Bellows
2 x Shock Absorbers
1 x Level Control Values
1 x Stabilizers
Rear Suspension 4 x Air Bellows
4 x Shock Absorbers
2 x Level Control Values
1 x Stabilizers
Space Baby modulated beat-synced digital delay. This was the project for Handmade Music Austin #5 (along with the Bleep Labs PicoPao), which was on Feb 28, 2010. More information is available on woosteraudio.com/space-baby.html
Group 4_
Aaron Onchi, Betty Sanchez, Roberto Gutierrez, Frank Durán , Belén Olaya García
Networked Fabrication for Urban Provocations.
Shifting Paradigms from Mass Production to Mass Customization
Computational architecture and design course
Conventional construction methods all depart from the basic premises of mass production: standardization, modulation and a production line. What these systems developed during the last two centuries fail to take into account are the evolutionary leaps and bounds the manufacturing industry has taken over the last decades. With the introduction of CNC technologies and rapid prototyping machines have altered the paradigms of fabrication forever. It is due to these new tools that it is now possible to create (n) amount of completely unique and different pieces with the same amount of energy and material that is required to create (n) identical pieces. The possibilities for implementation of new forms, textures, materials and languages are infinite due to the versatility that these new tools offer a growing network of architects, designers, fabricators that are integrating them into their professional practices to generate unique and precise objects that respond to countless data and real-life conditions.
Instructors:
Monika Wittig [ LaN, IaaC ]
Shane Salisbury [ LaN, IaaC ]
Filippo Moroni [ SOLIDO, Politecnico di Milano ]
MS Josh Updyke [ Advanced Manufacturing Institute, KSU, Protei ]
Aaron Gutiérrez Cortes [ Amorphica ]
§ Eventually, after a long sequence of successive impressions that incessantly compassed into our experiences, the journey is terminated to a dissolution of serenity when we stand confronting the frontage of central sikhara • The incremental aspect in the anthropometrical scale of sikhara is inverse to the decremental determination in the sensational space of our Self • When our expectation was aroused in each step of experiences, we finally can substantiate the salient characteristics of this destination • The architect articulated the modulation of scale and space as cogent mean to stimulate our delectation while enforcing us simultaneously to be aware of our deterioration before affirming them into emancipation at end •
§ The galleries that conjoin to each cardinal axis of the central sikhara project our eyes to elevate from the horizontal line to the finial • The massive form of God proposes incisively an effect to our senses and elicits an emotion to its plastic form that wakes a profound reverberation in us • The ever-diminishing tiers of the curvilinear sikhara assist our eyes to comprehend the finial, and thereby the infinite atmosphere above the sky and the Universe • The formal diminution of its superstructure, by the dimensional depth of its perspective in compliant with the inventive space of the vaporous cloud that oscillates about the finial, reveals the ingenious articulation of the architect in maturating our contemplation with deepest relaxation •
§ Angkor Vat is not an autotelic architecture • The manifestation of the Universe, the objective world of reality, the analogy of God to the subjective realm of Truth in Self, all were simply existed here • A brief tenancy of ego (ahamkara) in the world of human egocentrism in the past, the present, and the future is a mere delusion; only when we can deliberate ourselves from ignorance • Time is a reflexive force of space which contains in all animate beings with ignorance • Only quintessence of our Self-Realisation will terminate time and space of here and there everlastingly •
Crown XLS1000 DriveCore Series Power Amp Description:
Crown's XLS1000 power amplifier is a premiere portable PA system with unmatched performance, technology, and affordability. It includes multiple inputs so you can plug in anything and play anywhere, along with several system setup configurations. This high-performance Crown power amp provides enormous power and flexibility thanks to the integrated DriveCore Technology, PureBand Crossover System and Peakx limiters. Weighing less than 12 pounds, The Crown XLS1000 power amp is much easier to set up and move from show to show.
A Power Amp with Integrated DriveCore Technology Class D amplifiers are notable for extraordinarily high efficiency and being well suited for driving difficult reactive loads such as subwoofers. However, their performance can suffer impaired performance on marginal and unstable AC line supplies. To overcome this obstacle, Crown engineers developed DriveCore Technology—a proprietary hybrid analog-digital integrated circuit (IC) developed with Texas Instruments that drives the "front end" of the Class D output stage. Over 60 years of Crown's design knowledge and experience went into the development of this technology resulting in truly remarkable benefits. The DriveCore Technology incorporated in the Crown XLS1000 power amp provides an extremely wide tolerance with regards to sagging or "dirty" AC line conditions, providing consistent performance without affecting audio quality. This means the Crown power amp will not compromise your performance by fluctuating generator power, or overload from lighting rigs, backline gear, etc.
In addition, DriveCore Technology's patented feedback and PWM modulation circuits enable fast recovery on peak transients, accurate reproduction of low-level detail, and precise tracking of low-frequencies at high power levels for maximum subwoofer output.
Advanced Switched-Mode Power Supply
The advanced power supply in the Crown power amp is highly efficient and optimized for maximum power transfer from the AC line through the Class D output stage to the loudspeakers. A benefit to this is substantial weight reduction when compared to older 60Hz transformer-based power supplies.
PureBand Crossover System
The PureBand Crossover System in the XLS Series adds an enormous amount of flexibility and performance to any system. With this system, the crossover frequency is completely variable allowing the choice of any crossover point between 50Hz and 3kHz on 1/12 octave centers. The use of 4th order Linkwitz-Riley filters provides steep slopes for a seamless transition between high and low drivers. And with four crossover modes to choose from providing the ultimate in flexibility, all of your system needs are covered.
Peakx limiters
Peakx limiters provide the ultimate in performance and protection for your entire system. This advanced algorithm was specifically developed and tuned to work with this amplifier and power-supply to achieve higher SPL will less audible artifacts. This means less distortion, less shutdowns, and maximum safe power delivered to your speakers. The Peakx limiters can be easily turned on or off by channel right from the front panel eliminating the need to be digging around in the back of the dark rack.
Crown XLS1000 DriveCore Series Power Amp Features:
XLS High Performance, Lightweight Class D amp weighs less than 11 lb.
Integrated PureBand Crossover System for better performance and control
Peakx Limiters provide maximum output while protecting your speakers
XLR, 1/4", RCA inputs provide outstanding flexibility
1/4" Inputs can be used as loop-thrus to distribute signal to additional amplifiers Efficient forced-air fans prevent excessive thermal buildup
Electronically balanced XLR inputs; touchproof binding post and Speakon outputs
Precision detented level controls, power switch, power LED, and six LEDs indicate signal, clip and fault for each channel
Three-Year, No-Fault, Fully Transferable Warranty completely protects your investment and guarantees its specifications
SMS303 Tantek Tanrak (9 module Modular FX):
- Comp-Lim2
- Parametric Equaliser
- Enhancer
- Modulation Oscillator
Info:
Mid 1980's Tantek, Tanrak Studio Effects Rack which was available in kit form or ready built. These were bought as kits and put together by an electronics engineer. On the face of it, they're simple analogue effects - a bit old-fashioned, really - but that's the charm of them. They've perfectly useable and immediately accessible, so you'll have great fun fiddling with the settings - try sweeping the EQ frequency, or riding the delay time for on-the-fly munchkinisation, for instance.
Even better, you'll find new ways to patch the modules together. Everything - in, out and sidechain - is accessible from the rear panel (there's a default path from left to right across the rack if you don't want to use patch cords) so you can create LFO-modulated delay effects, frequency-sensitive compression ... you think of it, you can do it.
STEREO COMPRESSOR/LIMITER - A high quality stereo comp/limiter with variable input, slope, attack and release controls, and a switched 'key' input that can link both channels...handy for de-essing, ducking etc. It's pretty much 'invisible' when used as a limiter, only squeezing when the threshold is crossed (depending on the ratio setting). Great for laying vocal tracks, mix thickening, fattening up drums, percussions and bass. In fact, it can make anything sound 'phat' but still retains that important top-end clarity.
MODULATION OSCILLATOR - A CV modulation source whose features include sinewave output, variable duty cycle, key or CV controlled depth, triggerable sweeps and two independently variable outputs. Used with the muli-dealy to create chorus, flanging etc.
The Dirty Carter Electronic Sound Generating Instrument was designed by John Richards (Dirty Electronics) and Chris Carter from legendary Industrial pioneers Throbbing Gristle. It was produced for a special performance by Carter and the 25 strong Dirty Electronics Ensemble in 2010. It was originally designed as a touch controlled instrument with the player's skin resistance completing the circuit. This hard wired modification by A.S.M.O. gives more control and predictability by wiring all to the touch contacts to pots and switches. An additional low pass resonant filter has been added, LFO and an external CV socket for filter modulation.
The case is made of stained ply and the front panel is covered with black leatherette.
'Oscillator Bank', 'Waveform': mad-scientist lingo for unsuspecting musicians back in 1970.
Designed by Robert Moog in 1970, the Minimoog Model D synthesizer is still regarded as the Rolls Royce equivalent for analog keyboard-based synthesizers. Specifically designed for touring musicians, the minimoog exported electronic music experiments from university labs out to the masses - and her deep farting bass-sounds (think of Kraftwerk's Autobahn), lead and space bleeps and sweeps have become HUGELY popular over the last 38 years.
There were originally 13,000 minimoogs produced between 1970 and 1981. After a brief hiatus during the digital-synth craze in the 1980s, the minimoog enjoyed a resurgence of interest among musicians since the 1990s...and yes, it's becoming harder to get a hold on one.
I obtained this Mini from a studio garage sale back in 1989 for US$ 150 (in prime condition - save the crackling external input knob). After lying dormant for 7 years now, it's time to bring life back into this 1973 model D mini. Tropical humidity heavily damaged the furnishing. It needs re-tuning of the oscillators, cleaning of the electronic board, new switches for filter modulation, and thinking about a new base panel.
Group 4_
Aaron Onchi, Betty Sanchez, Roberto Gutierrez, Frank Durán , Belén Olaya García
Networked Fabrication for Urban Provocations.
Shifting Paradigms from Mass Production to Mass Customization
Computational architecture and design course
Conventional construction methods all depart from the basic premises of mass production: standardization, modulation and a production line. What these systems developed during the last two centuries fail to take into account are the evolutionary leaps and bounds the manufacturing industry has taken over the last decades. With the introduction of CNC technologies and rapid prototyping machines have altered the paradigms of fabrication forever. It is due to these new tools that it is now possible to create (n) amount of completely unique and different pieces with the same amount of energy and material that is required to create (n) identical pieces. The possibilities for implementation of new forms, textures, materials and languages are infinite due to the versatility that these new tools offer a growing network of architects, designers, fabricators that are integrating them into their professional practices to generate unique and precise objects that respond to countless data and real-life conditions.
Instructors:
Monika Wittig [ LaN, IaaC ]
Shane Salisbury [ LaN, IaaC ]
Filippo Moroni [ SOLIDO, Politecnico di Milano ]
MS Josh Updyke [ Advanced Manufacturing Institute, KSU, Protei ]
Aaron Gutiérrez Cortes [ Amorphica ]
Video here: www.youtube.com/watch?v=XrHkvvtrXhA
The Crazy Looper is a small handmade device that allows you the create real-time noise loops with a fast modulation metallic effect.
A regular location for taking photos at. I cross this point twice on bicycle commuting days.
The vehicle's rear lights appears as a dashed line. These are LED rear lights that derive their tail lamp illumination setting via Pulse Width Modulation control (they are turned on/off at a high frequency). The LEDs are operated 'full on' when used as a brake light.
From the early years of transistor radio history... this one has 6 whole transistors! They were very expensive in the late 1950's and started getting cheaper in the 1960's.
I'd wanted them for a couple of years, and finally I found a local source for PURPLE LED fairy (faerie? feri?? no.) lights, and hooboy was I happy! Yay! Purple LED lights, no shipping! As soon as I got home I strung them up.
But- wait! I know one or two things about semiconductor physics and engineering -- and there's NO SUCH THING as a purple LED! What's going on?!
Ahhh - campus Brutalism! As previously discussed, the tough-looking, severe and opaque concrete-and-masonry designs that popped up all over American campuses in the late 1960s aren't always reducible to the tidiest narrative at hand - that they were intended to armor the institution against its increasingly vocal critics in a time of social ferment. I'm generally not opposed to these readings outright, but they almost always need at least a little modulation. The timeline at Oberlin's Mudd building (with a design secured in 1967) seems pretty close to the mark, but you have to square fears of rebellious students with the way the building is actually described in the marvelous orange period piece that is its dedication volume. While obviously this stresses the college's own view of things, it opens with the architects' own statement, which places the thing squarely in the oft-overlooked comfy-cozy-friendly Brutalist discourse. The goal is to produce an "informal atmosphere" for study, with "organized nooks and crannies," to "fit a variety of moods and feelings." This granola sensibility, strongly reminiscent of Herman Hertzberger, suggests also a likely borrowing from Kahn's view of a building as a "harboring thing."
Sadly, we didn't have time to really explore this one - it seems the modest double-height space is on the piano nobile, and the bridges over the entry (which a critic might read as foreboding archers' redoubts) are meant to shelter the entry while providing honors students with removed study carrels (and what must be lovely views of the quad). The first step in meeting Brutalism head-on is accepting that, for the architects if not the users, the apparent contradiction between severe abstraction and day-glo floppy furniture in which to "rap" about the issues of the day was not a contradiction. These were supposed to be the communal buildings of the future; they were visually abstract and massed according to internal space concepts in order that the open-minded youth of the 1970s would feel at home in them. While it's a commonplace to assume that everybody in fact found them menacing and alienating, I for one always felt more comfortable, as a student, in the nook-and-cranny buildings than the overscaled gable-and-column fests that came later. That's not to say that I think this thing needs to be quite so huddled and dark, or that its monumental glowering presence doesn't perhaps serve (or produce) a certain top-down relationship between institution and user. But the fit is always loose.
Jamis DXT Dual Sport Bicycles ON/OFF road hybrids: What are they? This is a hybrid with a mountain bike position but with road wheel 29” 700c wheels that are a bit wider then road hybrids so they are great for all round use: roads, dirt roads, a bit of mud as well. You can put wider tires with bigger tread as well if you want to go hard core off roading. They also have suspension forks and mountain bike gears so they are like a light weight fast mountain bike.
The dual-sport DXT’s are pumped-up, go-anywhere/do-anything versions of our Allegro fitness bikes. With more gearing range to take on steeper hills and tougher terrain. Wider tires with a trail-capable tread for access to more riding areas, both paved and packed. And disc brakes and suspension forks for real off-road exploration and off-pavement adventure.
Fast Tires: The advantage of large diameter wheels is getting a lot of press these days with all the noise and news about 29’er mountain bikes. We like to think that the DXT is one of the original 29’ers. With big 700c hoops (same as a 29’er) that roll over bumps & holes better than smaller diameter 26” or 27.5” wheels, and with a bigger contact patch for greater traction and control. But in the case of the DXT, with a smaller 40c width & smoother tread that significantly reduces rolling resistance over fatter, knobbier mountain bike tires for faster sailing on streets and paths.
Absolute versatility: Every DXT offers a full complement of eyelets and rack mounts to simplify installation of carriers and fenders. We even include bosses on the underside of the seatstays for installation of a ring lock. Ring locks are tremendously popular in Europe. A simple turn of the key immobilizes the rear wheel and prevents someone from riding off with your bike.
Go Anywhere. Do Anything: The drivetrains on our DXT bikes feature long cage ATB rear derailleurs, full-size triple chainring cranksets and big 11-34 or 32T cassette blocks. This gives you the dual advantage of having high road bike gearing for controlled pedaling at speed on descents and low mountain bike gearing for easier pedaling uphill.
Full Shimano Shift Systems: Fully integrated shifting systems offer the most precise and reliable performance. That’s why every DXT offers Shimano shifters, Shimano front and rear derailleurs, Shimano cranksets and Shimano cassettes.
Awesome brakes: The advantages of disc brakes over rim brakes on a versatile bike like the DXT far exceed their sole disadvantage, weight gain. Besides their incredible power and modulation, they’re just plain safer, especially in the rain. Once rims get wet or muddy, using friction to stop the wheel at its circumference is less efficient than using friction to stop a less wet or muddy small diameter disc near the center of the wheel from rotating. And eliminating the rim from braking surface duties results in a longer lasting wheel
Suspension When you need it, Lock out when you don’t: The advantage of a suspension fork should be intuitively clear: hit a bump and absorb it. Hit a bump and stay in control of your bike. But suspension isn’t always desirable. When riding on smooth pavement or climbing, pedaling energy and power can be absorbed and dissipated by the movement (bobbing) of the fork. Enter lockout. With a flip of a knob on the top of the fork, the fork’s travel can be locked from movement, allowing the bike to be 100% responsive to pedaling input .
Adjustable Cockpit height (stem adjustment): Proper fit on your bike is critical for maximum performance and comfort. That’s why we offer the patented ATS adjustable threadless steering system on the Allegro Elite and Comp models. Whether you want to fine tune your ride and establish the perfect fit, or change it regularly to suit different terrain, with this stem, adjusting your handlebar height is as easy as adjusting your seat post height. You can even adjust it quickly while out on a ride.
2016 DXT Sport $586 WAS $853
www.rbinc-sports.com/catalog/bikes/jamis-bikes/street/dua...
2015 DXT SPORT STEP THROUGH $599 WAS $955
www.rbinc-sports.com/catalog/bikes/jamis-bikes/street/dua...
2015 DXT COMP $817 WAS $1279
www.rbinc-sports.com/catalog/bikes/jamis-bikes/street/dua...
2016 DXT COMP $699 WAS $1069
www.rbinc-sports.com/catalog/bikes/jamis-bikes/street/dua...
2016 DXT ELITE $899 WAS $1459
www.rbinc-sports.com/catalog/bikes/jamis-bikes/street/dua...
2017 DXT SPORT $771
www.rbinc-sports.com/catalog/bikes/jamis-bikes/street/dua...
2017 DXT SPORT FEMME $771
www.rbinc-sports.com/catalog/bikes/jamis-bikes/street/dua...
www.rbinc-sports.com/catalog/bikes/jamis-bikes/street/dua...
www.rbinc-sports.com/jamis-factory-outlet-store/jamis-dxt...