View allAll Photos Tagged switchboard

Under the Rock of Gibraltar are many military tunnels. Some have equipement left. This is an old electrical switchboard from one of the artillery stations up there.

“Photo 6: The Switchboard of the Test Stand following the Modification. Right Side: Pressure Gauge with Reduction Valves, High Pressure Valves, Bleeders and Manometers. Left Side: Control Station with Main Fuel- and Oxygen Valves and Armoured Observation Slit.” From Wernher von Braun’s Doctoral Dissertation, page 29.

Electrical Occupations, by Lee M. Klinefelter. New York: Dutton, 1937.

And you though the last pic showed dated equipment!

A telephone switchboard

From The People's Common Sense Medical Adviser

This image is for your personal use only. NOT FOR COMMERCIAL USE.

Hmmmm, looks like I caught Mary eating dinner, and her main course is a .... wiener! That's quite a collection of expensive, fashionable bags on the couch beside her.

i would love to know if anyone can identify this man. my father was oic of this wireless station in the 2 years prior to its handover in 1971. he has some good memories of the local staff, some of whom had worked there for years.

Saigon, March, 1968: Soldiers from the 69th Signal Battalion man the switchboards that link Saigon's main headquarters with the rest of South Vietnam.

What it looked like on the morning crushing started. Closed down in 2005 and demolitioned between 2007-09.

Morrow Switchboard Rev 2 S100 Bus Card Serial and Parallel I/O

Local Accession Number: 11_07_003290

Title: Waltham Police headquarters, Waltham, MA

Creator/Contributor: Grant, Spencer, 1944- (Photographer)

Genre: Film negatives; Group portraits

Date created: 1978

Physical description: 1 negative : film, black & white ; 35 mm.

General notes: Title from photographer caption.

Subjects: Police; Police stations; Telephone switchboards

Collection: Spencer Grant Collection

Location: Boston Public Library, Print Department

Rights: Copyright (c) Spencer Grant

a fine specimen from the sterling switchboard company, camden, nj.

Nixy and I had a great Switchboard blend coffee at E23 Relay Coffee on Concession Street. Great coffee, great conversation, great company

Prospekt der Haustelefonzentrale Hasler SKW-1000 Ende 60er Anfangs 70er Jahre

This old switchboard was hanging out at the Wilshire Ebell in a fairly dark second story hallway at the top of the stairs. You could easily walk past it and not notice it. The only light I had with me was the 580EXII, but with no remote trigger nor sync cable. It had to be fired from the hotshoe, so my bounce options were limited.

Working the switchboard at the Charles River Museum of Industry

Information Age, Science Museum

One of a series of photographs in the John Fairbairn Anderson Collection, early 1900s.

The Pay Phone has been hanging on the wall in the hallway for 17 years, and I had the other old phone related parts in a box in the basement. Today I decided to trade them out.

 

The candlestick phone is from the 1890s through 1920, when it had its last upgrade to a dial phone.

 

Underneath that, is an office switch board for a 5 phone system from Downey, California from approximately 1925-30, and below that is a 4 line rural switchboard from a very small exchange.

 

And to ring the bell at the top of the stack, is a magneto at the bottom.

A distinctive address. 5 blocks from leading department stores and restaurants. Fireproof. Soundproof. 24 hour switchboard.

Perfect for ReceptionistsHD graphical display47 keys, 13 LEDs47 keys, 13 LEDsDirectory, Conference, Do not disturb buttons2 x 10/100 Mbps ethernet portsSpeakerphone.

@danblack90 Gateway Switchboard for the win! #deckthehalls

Circa 1904 somewhere in North America. "Switchboard in dynamo room."

 

From Shorpy.com

I used to be a switchboard operator at several hospitals when we still had oldish equipment like here at the old PFD: www.portlandfiremuseum.com/exhibits.htm

@danblack90 Gateway Switchboard for the win! #deckthehalls

taking pictures of strangers is easier in sculpture gardens. this young woman turned just as I pressed the shutter.

A control panel, a distribution board, on a curved wall in the confined space of a circular building, next to a massive square pillar, the whole lot illuminated by low angle Winter sunlight streaming through an open door as the only light source — what could possibly go wrong?

 

Well, quite a lot really. But thanks to the techno magic of post processing here you get some idea of that which remains in the Orroral Geodetic Observatory. There's not a lot more to see and regrettably neither of the two upper levels is accessible via the now locked door closing off the ascending helical stairs.

 

There must have been so much more techno magic jammed into this little space, back in the day; back when this floor was jammed full with desks and monitors, equipment, technicians and scientists. Those square pillars complicating the space had an intriguing role: sitting on neoprene pads they isolated the telescope from movements of the observatory shell.

 

All that stuff is gone now. This, the bare carcass, is now has a heritage listing and bugger-all else.

Prospekt der Hasler Chef und Direktionstelefonapparate Haustelefonzentrale Telefonzentrale Telefon 60er 70er Jahre

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