View allAll Photos Tagged scraper
We went for a bush walk and these boot scrapers are at the entrance of the walkway so we can scrape off any mud and seeds and more importantly any disease. Good to see it has been well used. Where we went there were Kauri trees, however, they were a three hour walk and we (Mike) cannot make that journey these days so we went as far as we could admiring the beautiful New Zealand bush.
631 Cat scrapers wait to be loaded on US 59 project in Douglas County, KS. Ames Construction is the contractor
Not sure what this is--the curvature of the top and closeness to the wall suggests something else than a boot scraper.
A shipspotter will tell you this is a scraper-reclaimer vessel, utilized on the Australian coast due to the mix of powdered and granular cargoes carried for the construction industry. Scraper-reclaimer vessels can handle granular materials such as gypsum plus powder materials such as cement and fly-ash. The unloading system consists of a hoistable scraper system in the holds, elevators, conveyors on deck and a boom conveyor for transferring cargo to shore.
I'm not into shipspotting but was interested enough to look it up.
140/365 This was nothing compared to the pneumonia/legionnaires I had in 2018! Possibly because I've had 2 vaccinations and 1 booster
Towed Pull Scraper, also called a pan scraper, earth scraper, or pull pan, they work by slicing off layers of soil like a plane shaves wood. They’re commonly used for excavation, grading, landscaping, finishing, or leveling purposes, as well as for hauling and spreading dirt.
Photography © Jeremy Sage
Rodney Street in Liverpool is noted for the number of doctors and its Georgian architecture. It is sometimes known as the "Harley Street of the North". Together with Hope Street and Gambier Terrace it forms the Rodney Street conservation area. There are over 60 Grade II listed buildings on the street and one II* church.
Unnoticed by many passers-by are some of the old fixtures and fittings attached to many of the houses . This , possibly Victorian , boot scraper is one of many that still stand on the steps of some of the houses .
Date: 1945
Description: Seabee scraper in front of airplane hangar.
Medium/Format: B/W photograph
Location: Unknown
Collection: Equipment
Rights Info: No known restrictions on publication.
Repository: U.S. Navy Seabee Museum, Collections Department, Port Hueneme, CA 93043, www.history.navy.mil/museums/seabee_museum.htm
Call Number: