View allAll Photos Tagged scraper
It was a cold minus 12 degree C kind of walk, to the Remembrance day ceremony at the park but worth every step to see so many people there.
Aveling Austin scraper from Ireland seen in rural north Essex.
Registered as a yellow Aveling Barford with no year of make recorded.
At the Stella-Jones plant near Bangor, Wisconsin – Railroad cross-ties are stacked into tall towers while they wait to be pressure-treated with creosote.
This plant is one of about a dozen Stella-Jones Corporation locations in North America that produces this essential product for the railroad industry. – October 2024 ~~ A Jeff Hampton Photograph ©
used by the dubany to carry cargo, droids processed metal, and a mini crawler, made from a abandoned heavy crawler drone.
on barr the most common sight is seeing one of these ugly behemoths traveling over the dunes, collecting anything they can trade such as droids, abandoned cargo, and the occasional MERK wreck.
we'll start from the top down.
with the command cab the dubany house leader can drive and be in control of the whole damn thing, with the series of controls he can control the speed, turning, boom arm, main door, and the rake in the rear and the magnet in the front.
lets go middle.
the middle floor houses the beds, smelter controls, smelter feed, workbench and a little cargo space, as well as a ladder to the main floor, speaking of which.
talking main......floor.
the main floor is where all the trading happens, this part can look different depending on which crawler you are on, this one contains three mics, a bathroom sink, a fabricator, three random droids, some cargo, and the smelters ingot dispenser.
fin.
these behemoth vehicles are a sight to see, able to venture over the dunes, and recycle junk that litters the surface, nothing can stop these junk vacuums.
to see more go to: www.artstation.com/thormagniss
Olympus 35RD,
Olympus Zuico 40mm f/1.7
Lomography Earl Grey, 100 ASA
Kodak HC-110, Dilution B
Epson Perfection V850 Pro
Sturdy cast iron bootscrapers on the steps into the little church of St Mary's on Brownsea Island, Dorset.