View allAll Photos Tagged prototyping
Boeing 727-22 (prototype)
C/N: 18293
Registration: N7001U
More about the 727 restoration.
Museum of Flight Restoration Center (Everett, Washington)
Photo by www.kensaviation.com
I love my stock girls ❤
From left tor right: 1972 Kenner blonde, EBL Love Mision, Mystery girl (BL Mondie prototype?), EBL Tea for two, 1972 Kenner brunette
Alison, Raven, Madeliefje, Minou, Ronja
This is the mythical 1974 Paris Motor Show turbo prototype. It's spent most of it life here in Australia, as both a race car and then a road car. Most people
know little about this car and many inaccuracies abound. It's often referred to as having a wooden engine. It had a real but non-functioning engine from the sump plate up to the induction, but the
'turbo' bits were indeed made of timber. The sale sheet shows a chassis number.
Even though it should have 2 consecutive threes in it, the chassis is that of a 1973 2.4S coupe. Its original windscreen had the 'Carrera' script engraved across the top, but sadly that is long gone. I believe the car was sold to Chicago. In the 70's I worked at
Sydney's then-only Porsche dealer and we had the car in the showroom for a while. I have lots of photos of it in its original condition. I love this car! I'd love to build a rep of it. These shots were taken at the Phillip Island historic meeting in 2007.
This new vortex chamber prototype for use in a chemical looping combustion reactor was fabricated with a 3D printer and will be used to separate coal ash from the oxygen carrier.
An anonymous paper prototype/idea. Each workshopper responded to one of the best ideas from their team brainstorm, using any of the various materials I provided.
many of the ideas considered geolocation, personalising the Gormley figures, engaging young children, various "Where's Wally" ideas and many more brilliant ideas.
JAGUAR XJ13 THE FABULOUS MIDENGINED VEE-12 PROTOTYPE BUILT BIJ JAGUAR IN THE MID-1960s,TESTED BUT NEVER RACED.
This is the prototype swan I created for the wedding swan decoration. I was going for a swan boat feel allowing for fake greenery to be added later.
We’re prototyping new ways to move animated creatures for our upcoming Haunted House with lower-school and middle-school students in our Maker Art class this fall.
In this after-school workshop, students will build a fantasy world together, with magical creatures, ghosts, witches and other animated characters inspired by Halloween.
To prepare for this class, my associate Sarah Brewer and I are prototyping an animated creature, using laser cut wood and cardboard to make it move up and down, as if flying.
This open-close mechanism was designed by maker HyunJoo Oh, who is working with PaperMechatronics.net. She has graciously shared their detailed instructions with us. Much appreciated!
We will combine arts and technology such as this to bring our class creations to life: each student will have their own room in our haunted house, and they will learn to build simple robots and automata like these, then play with lights and sounds to tell their stories for our ‘show and tell’.
We are offering this class in two different schools this fall. At the Lycée Français in Sausalito, we teach lower school students in grades 4 and 5, every Thursday at 3:30pm, from September 15 to December 8, 2016. At Tam High School, we teach middle school students in grades 6 to 9, every Wednesday at 3:30pm, from September 28 to November 16, 2016.
Students will create their own interactive art, in a playful way that makes learning more fun. Working collaboratively, they will make lights blink, sounds play and things move — bringing characters to life inside a cardboard ‘wonderbox.’
View more photos of our Haunted House class:
bit.ly/haunted-house-lycee-2016-photos
Learn more about our Haunted House class at Tam Makers:
www.tammakers.org/haunted-house/
To learn more about our Maker Art programs, visit this page:
on-one pompblingamine* prototype on the way to work.
i've tried getting rid of those bursts of wind noise from this video but i can't...
*i'm pretty sure that if this ever gets made it WON"T be called a pompblingamine!
We’re prototyping new ways to move animated creatures for our upcoming Haunted House with lower-school and middle-school students in our Maker Art class this fall.
In this after-school workshop, students will build a fantasy world together, with magical creatures, ghosts, witches and other animated characters inspired by Halloween.
To prepare for this class, my associate Sarah Brewer and I are prototyping an animated creature, using laser cut wood and cardboard to make it move up and down, as if flying.
This open-close mechanism was designed by maker HyunJoo Oh, who is working with PaperMechatronics.net. She has graciously shared their detailed instructions with us. Much appreciated!
We will combine arts and technology such as this to bring our class creations to life: each student will have their own room in our haunted house, and they will learn to build simple robots and automata like these, then play with lights and sounds to tell their stories for our ‘show and tell’.
We are offering this class in two different schools this fall. At the Lycée Français in Sausalito, we teach lower school students in grades 4 and 5, every Thursday at 3:30pm, from September 15 to December 8, 2016. At Tam High School, we teach middle school students in grades 6 to 9, every Wednesday at 3:30pm, from September 28 to November 16, 2016.
Students will create their own interactive art, in a playful way that makes learning more fun. Working collaboratively, they will make lights blink, sounds play and things move — bringing characters to life inside a cardboard ‘wonderbox.’
View more photos of our Haunted House class:
bit.ly/haunted-house-lycee-2016-photos
Learn more about our Haunted House class at Tam Makers:
www.tammakers.org/haunted-house/
To learn more about our Maker Art programs, visit this page:
Petersen Auto Museum.
Designed by Julian Brown.
Rear mount, radial 6 cylinder air-cooled engine.
Aluminum body.
Driver position in middle of cabin flanked by two jump seats with two seats behind..
One of the great things about the museum is that they've got loads of interesting BL prototypes that never made it into production (and some that did).
This is an SD Rover Estate that never saw showrooms.
An anonymous paper prototype/idea. Each workshopper responded to one of the best ideas from their team brainstorm, using any of the various materials I provided.
many of the ideas considered geolocation, personalising the Gormley figures, engaging young children, various "Where's Wally" ideas and many more brilliant ideas.