View allAll Photos Tagged pump
Gas pumps at an abandoned grocery store at Harvey, Kentucky (near Benton). The weights and measures stickers on the pumps were last validated in 2004.
Canon FTb
Canon 50mm F=1.4
Ilford Pan F+ shot at ISO 50, developed for 11 minutes in Rodinal 1+50 @ 68 degrees. 10 initial inversions followed by 5 inversions every 30 seconds.
Scanned on Epson V600
Equivalent with Warman 6/4 D-AH Slurry pump
Max Flow: 100L/sec
Max Head: 56 Meters
Size: 1021x812x668mm
Weight: 626kg
Suction: 6 inch
Discharge: 4 inch
Material: High chrome or Rubber liner
The haskel Oxygen booster pump sets the standard for air driven oil free bosster pumps world wide. The unit uses high technology engineering to achieve 3,000psi oxygen boosting capability. The service kits cost aorund USD2-3,000, and carrying out the precise Oxygen cleaning necessary to ensure one is not blown to pieces when used is a very highly skilled task.
The building known locally as “The Pump House” is a red brick structure with an approximately
1400 square foot footprint that stands on the west bank of the Kalamazoo River across from downtown Saugatuck. It is located at the foot of a large, wooded sand dune known as Mount
Baldhead, which is a city park. The area is today wooded with homes and cottages, docks on the river, and a magnificent view up and down the river. The pump house stands with its back (west side) to Park Street and front (east) facing the river. There are six parking spaces to the west, along the street, and a large parking lot across the street to the west. The lot on which the building sits measures 115 feet on the east and west sides, seventy feet on the north boundary and forty-three feet on the south. The Saugatuck-Douglas Historical Society (SDHS) has leased the property from the City of Saugatuck since 1992. A concrete switchback walkway was added to the north of the building around 1995 to facilitate access for the disabled. Between 1999 and 2001 new gardens were designed and planted along the walkway; they are maintained by the SDHS. Entrance to the site is through a hip-roof brick and wood pavilion (visible at right edge of Photo 1) that was constructed in 2001.
The Saugatuck Pump House meets national register criterion A in the Saugatuck context for housing Saugatuck’s first public water supply pumping station and electric system generating plant. The water pumping station went into operation in 1904, the electric plant, operated by the
Lake Shore Electric Company, in 1912. The pump house also meets national register criterion
B for its direct association with John W. Alvord, a nationally prominent hydraulic and sanitary engineer of the time from the Chicago area. Alvord, who planned the village public water system of which the pump house was a component, was a summer resident in Saugatuck at the time he was tapped to plan Saugatuck’s water system and for over forty years in all.
The Saugatuck Pump House was listed in the National Register of Historic Places on December 29, 2015.
During a trike ride north of the Thunderbird Farms area of Maricopa I spotted this lonely pump that appeared to be abandoned or at least out of service. I suppose it was connected to a well or irrigation infrastructure. The concrete at bottom is the wall of an irrigation canal. This view looks north, toward Phoenix. This area is called "Papago Butte Ranchos."
For this picture I got off my recumbent trike.
Took this one a while back with my old camera. This is the pump house at Burnt Pond in the Corner Brook Watershed area in Curling.
I didn't turn it on, but the 3" trash pump I plan to pump papercrete
with is now ready to be tested. If this pump works I should be able to
dump 10 mixes a day into the ferrocement domes.
2 Alm. | Fire: Residential
THE WEST MALL (Holiday Dr Cambrian Rd} Etobicoke map
Rescue-Pumper-444 Pumper-445 Pumper-432 Platform-432 DistrictChief-44 Rescue-Pumper-441 Rescue-Pumper-434 Pumper-443 Pumper-431 Aerial-441 Squad-445 Air-Light-421 HazMat-145 DistrictChief-43 PlatoonChief-40 Command-30
Inside the Pump Room at West High Down, rocket testing site. Between 1955 and 1971 a top secret Space rocket and missile development centre was built on the site of the old Needles Battery, Isle of White. There were over 2,000 sq ft of control rooms with up to 240 people working there at any one time. They developed the space rockets called 'Black Night' and 'Black Arrow’. The Black Knight rocket was very successful with 22 test missions launched. Originally, the rocket was purely a test rocket, but in the early 1960s it was used to carry research modules into the upper atmosphere and in 1971 the only all British satellite was launched into orbit. The rockets were only tested on this site being launched from Woomera in Australia.The Pump Room cooled the steel exhaust buckets by pumping 3,000 gallons of water per minute.
An operational oilfield pump in Wilmington's heavily-industrialized area; right next to the sulfur pile 'mountain' in the other 2 videos here.
Slurry pump driven by engine. Suitable for places no power on site.
Welcome to contact us for more information.
Oil and gas seems to be a big topic lately. Here is a Colorado oil pump jack at a golden sunrise (also called nodding donkey, pumping unit, horsehead pump, rocking horse, beam pump, dinosaur, sucker rod pump (SRP), grasshopper pump, thirsty bird, jack pump, or popping johnny) is the overground drive for a reciprocating piston pump in an oil well.
Larger Hi Res View: www.jamesinsogna.com/Landscapes/Boulder-County-Colorado/1...
James Bo Insogna (C) - All Rights Reserved.
James Bo Insogna - Stock Photography Site www.JamesInsogna.com
Bo's Online Fine Art Print, Canvas, Acrylic and Metal Print Gallery - www.BoInsogna.com
Facebook: www.facebook.com/StrikingPhotographyByBo
Twitter: www.twitter.com/Lightning_Man