View allAll Photos Tagged remotecontrols
Suck on this Mr Harvey!
Got a circular polarizing filter for USD78 and a Nikon remote for USD5 from maxsaver.net.
Hoya 77mm PRO1 DIGITAL Circular Polarizer Filter DMC USD77.89
ML-L3 Wireless Remote Controller for Nikon D5000/D60/D40x/D40/D80/D70s USD4.95
free shipping - maxsaver.net/
the subway in all its L O U D N E S S {September 20 // 266}
• 23rd St, nyc
Today I went to go see, S H I T. I kid you not. There is an exhibit of a man who took pictures of crap. He then blew up the images to life-size, saturated the colour, played with depth of field and put them in an art gallery. The nicest thing this artist could do was put a picture of his mother's poo up on display. Every mothers' dream come true!
Yeah, it's awful out there, but I'm trying to use this to mentally prepare myself for Singapore in July, which should be, according to my dad, far more humid but the absolute temperature won't be as high. I think it's going to be crappy either way.
(When I was there in the winter it was the rainy season and marginally less intense. Note the place is 1 degree off the equator, so I'm kinda splitting hairs, and it'll just be as hot as it was then!)
In 1975 Canadian company Dominion Road Machinery developed a huge grader, the 80-T. At 700 horsepower, it was the world's largest grader, designed for mining applications. Soon thereafter, the company now called Champion Road Machinery updated the model to the 100-T. It featured a 7.3 m (24 ft.) blade.
Over its production span, only ten graders have been manufactured. Champion Road Machinery later became part of Volvo Construction Equipment.
My model in 1/28.5 scale features all the functionality of the real machine. The cab houses two SBricks and a battery box, while there is another SBrick in the engine compartment.
The following functions can be remote controlled via bluetooth and the Brick Controller 2 app:
- Drive: one Power Functions L motor
- Steering of the front wheels: one CaDa micromotor
- Leaning of the front wheels: one CaDa micromotor
- Articulated steering around a pivot located under the cab: one CaDa micromotor
- Left blade lift cylinder: one CaDa micromotor
- Right blade lift cylinder: one CaDa micromotor
- Rotation of the blade: one CaDa micromotor
- Side shift of the blade: one CaDa micromotor
- Blade pitch: one CaDa micromotor
Furthermore the rear powered bogies can oscillate independently and so can the front axle. This ensures always full ground contact of all six wheels.
An Extremely Easy to use full life-style elegant combined panel that solve the problem of cluttering and wall agony, the problem of knowing buttons functionality, and the problem of matching the decoration finishes and materials.
My early lessons flying (or not as the case may be) a pico Z micro helicopter. This little aircraft is virtually crash proof. . . .. and we can all be truly greatful for that.
(no helicopters were harmed in the making of this film)
He has a sissy controller holding technique.
When you shoot your opponent's tank, they get shocked through the controller. Metal strips on the top and bottom, on both hands. Like holding on to an electric fence. Sort of.
Hess got 'em for Christmas.
An Extremely Easy to use full life-style elegant combined panel that solve the problem of cluttering and wall agony, the problem of knowing buttons functionality, and the problem of matching the decoration finishes and materials.
The Queen Bee was developed as a low-cost radio-controlled target aircraft, for realistic anti-aircraft gunnery training. If it survived the shooting (as intended, by offset aiming), its controller would attempt to recover it for re-use!
The Queen Bee used the engine, unslatted wings, undercarriage and tailplane of a Tiger Moth. But instead of a Tiger Moth fabric-covered metal frame fuselage, it used a wooden (spruce and plywood) Moth Major fuselage as this was cheaper and offered bouyancy in the event of a ditching.
The aircraft could be flown manned, from the front seat. The enclosed rear cockpit position was equipped with RAE radio-control gear including pneumatically-operated servo units lnked to the aircraft rudder and elevator controls.
A four-bladed wooden windmill in the propellor slipstream on the fuselage port side drove an air-pump to provide compressed air for the gyro unit and servos.
This Queen Bee at the de Havilland Museum at London Colney was built by Scottish Aviation in 1944 and was acquired in incomplete form in 1986. It is being restored in its original colours and markings.
An Extremely Easy to use full life-style elegant combined panel that solve the problem of cluttering and wall agony, the problem of knowing buttons functionality, and the problem of matching the decoration finishes and materials.
One of my more recent projects. I built it from scratch.
Check out my scale crawler youtube channel;
Closer shot of the remote control from my Phillips OnDigital set top box.
The box is currently sat beneath my computer desk, with a cable attaching it to the PC! Rarely gets used though. Note the dust...
Anyway, I wanted to use this on a website to illustrate an article, and because it's creative commons licensed, so may other people ;)
An Extremely Easy to use full life-style elegant combined panel that solve the problem of cluttering and wall agony, the problem of knowing buttons functionality, and the problem of matching the decoration finishes and materials. It is an Award Winner.
101026-N-8913A-991
ATLANTIC OCEAN (Oct. 26, 2010) Gunner’s Mate 1st Class Omar Elhoss prepares to remotely fire one of the MK-38 25mm chain guns aboard the guided-missile destroyer USS Mitscher (DDG 57) at the ex-USNS Saturn from the ship’s bridge during a sinking exercise. Mitscher and other ships assigned to the George H.W. Bush Carrier Strike Group fired live ammunition at Saturn. (U.S. Navy photo by Mass Communication Specialist Seaman Leonard Adams/Released)
Pro Control remote we programmed for a cinema we designed. The Z series model lets you also control lights, thermostats, door locks, appliances and tons more smart home devices. Need help with your remote or control system? Call (864) 881-1675.
I was down in the church basement racing remote control cars today. A dusty, dark, basement with a homemade race car track is definitely a great place to be from a kid's perspective. And even from the perspective of a kid at heart.