View allAll Photos Tagged switchboard
Photograph of Miss D. Maltman, a civilian employed as a switchboard operator by the US Army Quartermaster Section at Larkfield House near Finaghy and Dunmurry.
Dated: 2nd November 1942
Main telephone switchboard of the KGB Inner Prison duty office. The Museum of Genocide Victims was established in 1992 after being used as a prison and detention centre during the Russian occupation from 1940 to 1991. The KGB Prison, located in the basement of the former courthouse, now looks the same as it did when it was vacated. Vilnius, Lithuania, 2003
From "Tim to the Lighthouse", written and illustrated by Edward Ardizzone.
Oxford University Press, first published in 1968, published in reset edition 1989.
Mars Confectionary "Wonders of the Queen Mary" (series of 25 issued in 1936)
#22 The Telephone Switchboard
The former Manly Ferry in Hobart in 1990.
At the time she was under the ownership of former firefighter Jim Hickman after her sale in 1987. She had travelled to Hobart under her own power and was in excellent condition.
Following Mr Hickman's passing she was sold to owners in Cairns whose plans folded after conversion for static use had begun. She is now landlocked and battling the mercy of the tropics.
This shows one of the gearboxes with a spare shaft from her sister Bellubera, awaiting installation. The existing had failed during the voyage down but, as a double ender, the ship merely changed ends!
Photo provided by: Donald Gueringer.
A1C Donald Gueringer in front and Charles F. Moffitt sitting at the desk and Elroy Hinton standing.
RAF Bruntingthorpe closed in 1962. After insuring all of my electronic equipment was dismantled, tagged, and crated I volunteered to help by operating the base switchboard. I still had about a week before my scheduled State-side flight out of RAF Mildenhall. By this time most of the USAF personnel had departed which made operating the switchboard a snap.
Private John Trone from the 56th Signal Battalion (V Corps) operating a telephone switchboard at Comber. Although the precise camp location is not recorded the switchboard is clearly within a Nissen hut.
The switchboard panel is a multi cord type BD-89A which was a component of the TC-2 Telephone Central Office set. The BD-89 was designed to be transportable, coming ready-built into a cabinet. The clock sitting on top of the switchboard carried the designation; U.S. Army Clock Message Center M1.
The Chelsea Clock Company was founded in 1897 and supplied clocks to the US military during WW2. The M1 was contained in a brass body with a wooden carrying box and had an eight-day movement. The later M2 variant remained in production until 1970.
Dated: 3rd November 1942.
Captioned on the original print simply as 'P.X. Board', this photograph shows the telephone switchboard at Langford Lodge with Lockheed employees operating the equipment.
Langford Lodge had over 100 desktop and wall-mounted telephones, requiring nearly three miles of cable for their installation.
Over the past year I've had plenty of experience in the production booth of a television studio. Pictured here is a small section of the switchboard used to control on-set graphics.
See more at markofphotography.com!
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Underground history session - with an excursion to the highly interesting former bunker of the West-German government. Built in the 1960/1970s, the system of 19km nuclear-blast-proof tunnels could host government and ministries of 3000 staff for 30 days.
used here, here, here, here, here
copyright © 2008 sean dreilinger
view many more condo-for-sale signs posted in lake oswego - DSC01710 on a black background.
Older photo of some of the switches I used to "play with" in the electrical control room of the powerhouse I worked for. I have others but cant seem to locate them. I retired from this job in Sept 2007 after 32 years of service.
Pvt. Earl Kuhleman from San Francisco, Pfc Rudy Fleischer from Chicago, and Pvt Michael Shore from N.Y.C photographed at the switchboard in Wilmont House, Headquarters for Northern Ireland Base Section.
Dated :20th October 1942
Israel Railways level crossing in Bat Galim, Haifa - next to almost abandoned Egged central bus terminal.
Sign says: "Emergency Switchboard, [dial] *2442, Level Crossing No. 6, Israel Railways"
By the failing light of an English winter afternoon, Polish soldier Katarzyna Bocknoch instructs a friend in the workings of a switchboard. It has been three years since they saw home, but these brave women work as hard as their men for the freedom of Poland! (Reproduced for me for my "Vintage " series. Thanks to Diana and Hillary!)