View allAll Photos Tagged pipeworks
The new pipework has combined with some exisiting pipework in the services distribution corridor, which here feeds into the ships stores.
No.1 Smithery, Chatham Historic Dockyard, Chatham, October 2010.
Photography by Julian Anderson, copyright © 2010.
For more information on this project, please visit the Max Fordham website.
For more information on our photographer-in-residence Julian Anderson, please visit his website.
Pipework a plenty. I'm not sure what the pile of bricks marked "C Brindley" do, if anyone has any ideas, currently presuming they minimise vibration resulting in a more stable tone production. Brindley & Foster of Sheffield manufactured the instrument in 1869.
Bet that pipeworks a few years old...just look at those brackets..(how sad am I)..!
Back of the Furness Railway Pub..Barrow..Cumbria..UK...
Change of pipework, as the new bath, has taps and drain in the middle. In this corner there is a hot and cold feed down to the Utility Room.
Workmen carefully position a pipe which will carry Bio Ethanol from the South of the Tees to the North via an underground tunnel.
Camera on extended monopod lifted in the air set on self time, manual focus, and guesswork, two off camera flash units 1 to the left and one behind.
Taken with f1.8 50mm lens on an E330,
handheld aperture priority auto
And, taken before I'd ver heard of "minimalist photography" so perhaps it isn't....
Much of the pipework of this organ was displayed in three separate cases. The console was mounted on rails mid-stage. It could be wheeled out from under the stage when in use. A "umbilical" wiring loom connected console to pipework via electromechanical relays.
Photo from BAC archive
Water flow through a bridge over one of the tributaries of Oak Burn. We were accosted by a number of BDF soldiers at this point - they mistook us and our trusty hound for a hunting party...
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