View allAll Photos Tagged pumps
This is a spectacular Home But could not photograph the front today , Always wanted to see inside ,Noticed for sale, www.rightmove.co.uk/property-for-sale/property-42455106.html
A small pump house near a small pond. Taken with Olympus 24 SP and Ilford Delta 100 developed in Fomadon R09 1:50. A positive was made on Fomaspeed paper.
07DW3260
Horsey Wind Pump.
Looking out towards Horsey mere.
Don't normally do this sort of processing, but this worked, so must be getting better at it.
Valve chest on the Sandfields pumping engine at Lichfield. This Cornish engine has a steam cylinder sixty five inches in diameter, the stroke being nine feet, and worked from the beam was a ram and bucket pump. The bucket was 25.625 inches and the ram 17.175 inches in diameter by 9 foot stroke, and once developed 190 hp at seven strokes a minute, whilst pumping water at the rate of two million gallons per day with a delivery head of 355 feet on the force pump. It was supplied and erected for the South Staffordshire Waterworks Company by Jonah and George Davies of Tipton and completed in late 1873 after their business had ceased trading. The engine finished working in 1927.
The Archimedean screw pump, is a machine used for transferring water from a low-lying body of water into irrigation ditches. Water is pumped by turning a screw-shaped surface inside a pipe.
The pump is commonly attributed to Archimedes on the occasion of his visit to Egypt. This tradition may reflect only that the apparatus was unknown to the Greeks before Hellenistic times and was introduced in Archimedes's lifetime by unknown engineers.
This picture was captured at Science Park, Bengaluru.
Crossness is a former sewage pumping station built in 1859 and 1865 as part of Bazalgette's redevelopment of the London sewage system.
This Grade II listed pumping station was built by the Rothschilds in 1867 to supply their estates at Tring, Halton, Aston Clinton and Waddesdon. It has been run by the Thames Water Authority since 1975.
an old pump off Broadway (Denver, CO)... 5 exp handheld HDR... my brand new sigma 10-20mm, I think this is going to be a great lens (I really like the flare it gets). The irony in this image is palpable....
as usual better.. View On Black
Pudding Mill Lane Pumping Station pumps sewage from the Queen Elizabeth Olympic Park into the main sewer system.
Some of the exterior panels are etched with images of technical drawings by engineer Sir Joseph Bazalgette for London's original 1860s sewerage system.
Designed by John Lyall Architects and completed in 2010.
Henry Curry built the Grade II-listed Pump Room for the 7th Duke of Devonshire in 1894 due to overcrowding at the previous well in the Natural Baths. It was last used to “take the waters” in the 1970s.
The building has been restored as part of the Crescent renovation and is now managed by the Buxton Crescent Heritage Trust and operates as a Visitor Centre.
needs a paint job but I guess I like it looking rustic,,,, and oh yes, it still works. I use the pump to water my potted plants...the gold bokeh in the background is the field of soya beans ready to be harvested,,,,,,
thanks so much for your visits and have a wonderful day,,,,,,
An early morning walk while most were still asleep. It was just me, the snails, the cattle and the cormorants. My wet shoes were forgotten in this golden hour.
The Pump Room Gardens were originally a private area only for those who were visiting the Pump Room, but in 1875 were opened to the public. A bandstand was installed and a second one, to this design, was designed by Walter MacFarlane & Co. and founded in Glasgow. It was installed in 1896 and last year was completely rebuilt to the same design. The gardens (unlike the Jephson Gardens) are not particularly large, but they provide a much-used flexible space and make a particularly fine entrance to those arriving from the station and walking over York Bridge.
I’m cropped right into an image shot at 400mm here. I’m REALLY pleased with the quality of the RAW image, it’s tack sharp at 100%, and even at 300% there is no camera shake and very little visible noise. The Canon 100-400 v2 is a beast of a lens!
What I’ve learnt though, is it performs much better at the highest possible shutter speed, which makes it perfect for scenes like this with no foreground, where I can shoot wide open.
As far as the subject goes here this is a typical prairie winter scene, coupled with a stunning sunset which often seems to accompany the extreme cold we are getting right now; this was shot in about -23C...the gloves did NOT stay off for long!
I had some shots where the sun pillar was directly over the pump jack, but this was my favourite of the session as a truck had just kicked up the gravel on the range road behind the pump. I’m finding this technique quite useful, we seem to rarely get mist around here, and this is a way injecting a bit of mood into the image.
As far as the edit goes, I hardly touched it. Brought out the white in the snow a bit and added a bit of clarity. Actually desaturated it slightly as the orange was too intense and looked a little garish.
Just a quick post that I hope everyone here has a fantastic April Fool's Day.
I know I have been remiss in not replying back to everyone who takes the time to comment, so I want to apologize to you all. I'll do a better job of responding.
Abandoned Gulf Oil pump station near Saint Annie in Laclede County Missouri by Notley Hawkins Photography. Taken with a Canon EOS 5D Mark IV camera with a Canon EF8-15mm f/4L FISHEYE USM lens at ƒ/4.0 with a 149 second exposure at ISO 200. Processed with Adobe Lightroom CC.
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©Notley Hawkins
Leica MP
Leica Summilux 35mm f/1.4 II
Kodak Tri-X 400
Kodak D76 (1+0)
8 min 15 sec 20°C
Scan from negative film