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This is what remains of the MV Irish Trader which ran aground at Baltray in 1974.

 

It has been well photographed by other photographers countless times before but I used a zone plate here to help provide the 'ghost-ship' impression which I always feel whenever I visit it.

 

Hasselblad with 75mm zone plate (pinhole)

Trader Joe's by Mike Mozart of JeepersMedia and TheToyChannel on YouTube.

We discovered this Trader Joe's by accident. Trader Joe's is a chain of specialty, small-format grocery stores. The average Trader Joe's carries 4,000 products vs. 50,000 at an average, large-format American supermarket. The chain has a reputation of stocking somewhat upmarket, fair-trade, gourmet and unusual food items.

 

Don, Rupert and I were quite excited to come across a Trader Joe's and we all bought a few things there, as it doesn't operate in Canada.

 

Having said that, people in Vancouver can buy a very limited selection of Trader Joe's products at a shop called Pirate Joe's, whose owner pays retail prices and buys Trader Joe's products in Washington state, then bring them back to Vancouver to resell in his shop. Despite (understandably) the very high prices at Pirate Joe, the shop is popular and does good business.

 

Pirate Joe's was made famous across North America because Trader Joe's sued, but lost, to stop Pirate Joe's from reselling Trader Joe's products in Canada.

 

www.cbc.ca/news/canada/british-columbia/trader-joe-s-lose...

BRISBANE TRADER

 

AUS

 

Owners: Australian Sg Commission

 

Port of Registry: AUS Melbourne

 

IDNo:6909624

 

Year:1969

 

Name:BRISBANE TRADER

 

Keel:

 

Type:Cargo Ship (RoRo)

 

Launch Date:8.2.69

 

Flag:AUS

 

Date of completion:4.10.69

 

Tons:6326

 

Link:1733

 

DWT:4493

 

Yard No:71

 

Length overall:136.7

 

Ship Design:

 

LPP:123.5

 

Country of build:AUS

 

Beam:21.5

 

Builder:Evans, Deakin & Co

 

Material of build:

 

Location of yard:Brisbane

 

Number of

screws/Mchy/

 

Speed(kn):2D-17.5

 

Naval or paramilitary marking :

A:*

End:2010

 

Subsequent History:

 

[1987 cv to RoRo ferry] - 86 ATHENS EXPRESS - 03 ATHENS - 10 WINNER 11

 

Disposal Data:

 

BU Alang 22.5.10

 

Details: Mirimar Index

 

Photo credits: Supplied by the late Don Ross Collection

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Bass Trader (1)

  

Shown here in Burnie Tasmania

  

Australian

  

4,129 gross tons, 1,994 net. 1,515 deadweight.

  

Lbd: 322'7" x 57'3" x 15'1". Vehicle deck vessel, cargo Ro/Ro built at the State Dockyard Newcastle New South Wales.

  

Twin screw, diesel engine. 14.5 knots. Radical design, found successful which led to bigger more innovative vessels coastally and globally.

  

Melbourne's Webb Dock was her principal port, then a two berth dock in 1966 when on Sundays' she would depart approx., 6pm for Tasmania and the small coaster, Noongah which berthed patiently at Nelson St Pier, Williamstown would then steam down the channel to take her berth.

  

Bass Trader was sold April 1975 to Halley Enterprise Shipping Inc., Panama and renamed Halley.

  

Scrapping began at Savona 21 November 1984

  

Photo Credits: TROVE the Australian National Library

 

Very clean image, with no signs of any kind of CA, either lateral or longitudinal. The Nikon 105 f/1.4E is superbly corrected, and is easily in Otus class for less than half the money.

 

With certain lenses, the camera is simply an image capturing accessory. This is one of those lenses.

 

Instead of buying a Fotodiox Fusion adapter that barely works for $400, I might be tempted to buy a used or gray market Nikon D810, which is still the best overall 35mm full-frame camera there is, notwithstanding the Sony A7R-II and the Canon 5DS R. And I am saying that as an owner of the A7R-II and the 5DS R, and a former owner of a D810.

 

DSC03549

Donington 2008

 

Ford Thames Trader

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Trading vessel on the Saigon River

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Out and about locally during the Easter Fair at Tywyn. One of the market traders.

Acadia Traders

New France hamlet, Busch Gardens Williamsburg, Williamsburg, VA

 

The Acadia Traders gift shop opened in winter 2016, featuring a selection of Canada-based merchandise; it also had a wine tasting bar during its' first few years, and while the bar itself is still intact they no do the tastings, instead just selling beer from behind the register area. The building was originally used as The Country Store Candle Shop, a store selling hand-carved candles that opened with the park in May 1975. It became The Bitter Root Company Store in 1984, though it appears that the candle carver still occupied a smaller portion of the salesfloor. The entire building became candle carver space again in the early 2010s when it was converted to The Village Candle Carver, which was relocated here in winter 2016.

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A beautifully restored 1960 Ford Thames Trader - parked up on the hill it provided the owners with a superb viewing platform from its flat bed. The Cultra Motorsport Festival 2024.

Candid shot at Camden Market of a coffee trader

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Scot Trader in Bangor Bay

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Taken a few weeks back on a visit to Shoreditch

Acadia Traders

New France hamlet, Busch Gardens Williamsburg, Williamsburg, VA

 

The Acadia Traders gift shop opened in winter 2016, featuring a selection of Canada-based merchandise; it also had a wine tasting bar during its' first few years, and while the bar itself is still intact they no do the tastings, instead just selling beer from behind the register area. The building was originally used as The Country Store Candle Shop, a store selling hand-carved candles that opened with the park in May 1975. It became The Bitter Root Company Store in 1984, though it appears that the candle carver still occupied a smaller portion of the salesfloor. The entire building became candle carver space again in the early 2010s when it was converted to The Village Candle Carver, which was relocated here in winter 2016.

Acadia Traders

New France hamlet, Busch Gardens Williamsburg, Williamsburg, VA

 

The Acadia Traders gift shop opened in winter 2016, featuring a selection of Canada-based merchandise; it also had a wine tasting bar during its' first few years, and while the bar itself is still intact they no do the tastings, instead just selling beer from behind the register area. The building was originally used as The Country Store Candle Shop, a store selling hand-carved candles that opened with the park in May 1975. It became The Bitter Root Company Store in 1984, though it appears that the candle carver still occupied a smaller portion of the salesfloor. The entire building became candle carver space again in the early 2010s when it was converted to The Village Candle Carver, which was relocated here in winter 2016.

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Corn market, Rissani, Morocco

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Ford Thames Trader Car Carrier Darling buds of May Show Bus Farm Kent 2006. A Near Perfect Example of a diesel Ford Thames Trader that i have passed on the A2 many times. Now Sadly sold to a new owner and shown further up country.

+++ DISCLAIMER +++

Nothing you see here is real, even though the conversion or the presented background story might be based historical facts. BEWARE!

  

In the period immediately after the Second World War the world found itself with hundreds of thousands of surplus aircraft and just as many surplus aviators. Most aircraft would meet the salvage blade and the smelter’s fiery furnace. Most pilots would return to civilian life, the bulk of them never to fly again.

 

With the plethora of military aircraft languishing in desert lots awaiting a certain fate, some of those disenfranchised aviators and aircraft designers would look to new growing markets for salvation. One of these emerging markets was the new-found requirement for fast and capable business transport aircraft for executives looking to link business interests across the vast distances of the nation. With few purpose-built business aircraft available for executives, medium bombers became the drug of choice for high flying big shots—fast, powerful and, with the right interior appointments, a visual statement of their success and power.

 

In early variants like the Executive, On Mark simply removed military equipment and replaced them with fairings and civil avionics, sealed the bomb bay doors, soundproofed the cabin, and added additional cabin windows. Later models had special wing spars designed to give more interior room, pressurization and equipment from bigger surplus aircraft such as DC-6 brakes and flat glass cockpit windows. It was an elegant mashing together of equipment, but it was not a true business aircraft.

 

In the Sixties, Jet Craft Ltd. of Las Vegas, Nevada, went for a different interpretation of the same topic: The company had purchased a number of former Royal Australian Air Force Vampire trainers and RCAF single-seaters, which were to be converted to a new design for a business aircraft called 'Mystery Jet', offering 4-8-seats.

 

Jet Craft worked with stellar British conversion experts Aviation Traders to do the structural design work. Aviation Traders Limited (ATL) was a war-surplus aircraft and spares trader formed in 1947. In 1949, it began maintaining aircraft used by some of Britain’s contemporary independent airlines on the Berlin Airlift. In the early 1950s, it branched out into aircraft conversions and manufacturing.

 

Aviation Traders worked on the drawings and the structural mock-ups. A full-scale mock-up of the Mystery Jet languished at Southend airport for a decade, trying to lure owners and operators into buying it. And this actually happened: about twenty former Vampire airframes were converted into Mystery Jet business aircraft, tailored to the customers' needs and desires.

 

The Mystery Jet was just what it looked like: a former De Havilland Vampire with a new, roomy nose section grafted onto it. The cabin was pressurized, and was available in two different lengths (130 and 160 inches long, with two or three rows of seats and reflected in the aircraft's title) and several window and door options - the most exotic option being the "Landaulet" cabin which featured a panoramic roof/window installation over the rear pair of seats (or, alternatively, a two-seat bench).

 

The original Goblin engine was retained, CG was retained due to the fact that the new cabin was, despite being considerably longer than the Vampire's nose, the biggest version being more than 8 feet longer. The new front section was much lighter, though, e. g. through the loss of the heavy cannons and their armament, as well as some more military avionics. The loss of fuel capacity through the enlarged cabin was compensated through fixed wing tip tanks, so that range was on par with the former military jet, just top speed and ceiling were slightly inferior.

 

Anyway, prices were steep and from the United States more modern and economical offerings ruled the market. Maintaining a former military jet was also a costly business, so, consequently, after a slight buzz (more of a hum, actually) in the early Seventies, the Mystery Jet and Jet Craft of Las Vegas, also fuelled by some dubious business practices by the company's owner, disappeared. Even further developments of the original concept, e .g. with a wide body for up to 14 passengers and two engines, would not save the Mystery Jet from failure.

  

General characteristics:

Crew: 1 pilot plus 5-7 passengers

Length (Mystery Jet 160): 38 ft 5 in (11.73 m)

Wingspan incl. tip tanks: 39 ft 7 1/2 in (12.09 m)

Height: 8 ft 10 in (2.69 m)

Wing area: 262 ft² (24.34 m²)

Empty weight: 7,283 lb (3,304 kg)

Max. take-off weight: 12,390 lb (5,620 kg)

 

Powerplant:

1× de Havilland Goblin 3 centrifugal turbojet, rated at 3,350 lbf (14.90 kN)

 

Performance:

Maximum speed: 516 mph (832 km/h)

Cruising speed: 400 mph (644 km/h)

Range: 1,220 mi (1,960 km)

Service ceiling: 37,700 ft (11,500 m)

 

Armament:

None

  

The kit and its assembly:

The first finished work in 2017 is a different kind of whif, one of the few civilian models in my collection. This conversion looks sick, but ,as weird as it may seem, the Business-Jet-From-Vintage-Vampires idea was real. For more information, and the source from where some of the backgound story was gathered, please check:

 

www.vintagewings.ca/VintageNews/Stories/tabid/116/article...

 

Anyway, my build is just a personal interpretation of the original concept, not a true model of the Mystery Jet. In fact, this was limited through the donor parts for this kitbash.

 

The rear end was the smaller problem: Airfix offers a very good Vampire T.11 trainer with excellent detail and fit - the passenger cabin was the bigger challenge. Finding "something" that would fit in shape and especialsl size was not easy - my first choice was a nose section from a vintage 1:100 Antonow An-24 from VEB Plasticart (still much too wide, though), and the best solution came as an accidental find in a local model kit shop where I found a heavily discounted MPM Focke Wulf Fw 189 B-0 trainer.

 

The reason: the kit was complete, but the bag holding the sprues must have been heated immensely during the packaging process: the main sprues were horrible warped - except for some single parts including the canopies and the sprue with the cabin! Height wind width were perfect, only the boxy shape caused some headaches. But I guess I would not find anything better...

 

That said, the transplantation mess started. I never built any of the two donor kits before, so I carefully tried to find the best place where to cut the Vampire's nose - I ended up with a staggered solution right in front of the wing root air intakes.

The Fw 189's cabin was bit more tricky, because I had to get rid of the original wing roots and wanted to use as much space as possible, up to the rear bulkhead and together with the rear cabin window. The idea was to blend the Fw 189's roof line into the Vampire's engine section, while keeping the original air intake ducts, so that the overall arrangement would look plausible.

 

The result became a pretty long nose section - and at that time the tail booms were not fited yet, so I was not certain concerning overall proportions. The cabin's underside had to be improvised, and blending the boxy front end with a flat underside into the tubby, round Vampire fuselage caused some headaches. I also had to re-create the lower flank section with styrene sheet, because I had originally hoped that I could "push" the new cabin between the wing roots - but that space was occupied by the Goblin's inlet ducts.

 

Inside of the cabin, the original floor, bulkheads and dashboard were used, plus five bucket seats that come with the MPM kit. In order to hide the body work from the inside, side panels from 0.5mm styrene sheet were added in the cabin - with the benefit of additional stability, but also costing some space... Since the machine was built with closed cabin, a pilot was added - actually a bash of a WWII Matchbox pilot and a German officer from an ESCI tank kit. Looks pretty good and "professional". ;-)

 

Once the cabin was in place, lots of PSR followed and the tail booms could be fitted. To my relief, the longer nose did not look too unbalanced (and actually, design sketches for the original Mystery Jet suggest just this layout!) - but I decided to add wing tip tanks which would beef up wingspan and shift the visual mass slightly forward. They come from an 1:100 Tamiya Il-28, or better the "R" recce variant.

 

The only other big change concerned the nose wheel. While the OOB wheel and strut were used, the well is now located in front of the wheel and it would retract forwards, giving the nose a more balanced look - and the cabin arrangement made this change more plausible, too.

 

Another addition were three small porthole windows in the solid parts of the cabin flanks - one of them ending up in the middle of the cabin door on starboard, where a solid part of the canopy roof lent itself for a good place just behind the pilots' seats.

  

Painting and markings:

I cannot help it, but the thing looks like a design from a vintage Tintin or Yoko Tsuno comic! This was not planned or expected - and actually the paint scheme evolved step by step. I had no plan or clue what to apply - the real Mystery Jet mock-up in silver with blue trim looked sharp, but somehow I did not want blue. So I started with the interior (out of a necessity, as the fuselage had to be closed before any further work progress at some point) and settled for plushy, British colors: Cream (walls and roof) and Claret-Red (carpet and seats).

 

I tried to find something for the outside that would complement this choice of colors, and eventually settled on Ivory and White (upper and lower fuselage halves, respectively) with some deep red trim, plus pale grey wing surfaces. I even considered some thin golden trim lines, but I think this would have been too much?

 

The trim was created with decals tripes from generic sheet material, the black anti-glare panel was painted, though. As a color contrast I painted some of the upper canopy panels in translucent, light blue, and this looks very good.

 

The wings received a lightb treatment with thinned black ink, in order to emphasize the engravings. No post-shading was done, though, for a rather clean look.

 

Most markings were puzzled together; the registration G-AZRE actually belonged to a Vickers Vanguard (from the 1:144 Airfix kit), the large letters above and under the wings were created with single 45° letters (USAF style). Most stencils come from a Vampire trainer aftermarket sheet from Xtradecal, from the OOB sheet only the "No step" warnings on the wings were used.

 

Finally, the kit was sealed with a semi-matt coat of varnish, except for the anti-glare panel, which recived a matt coat. The three small windows received artificial panes made from Clearfix, after their rims had been painted black.

  

A messy project, and you better do not take a close look. But the overall elegance of this creation surprises me - the real Mystery Jet already looked sleek, and this model, despite a more blunt nose, confirms this impression. The colors work together well, too - and the thing has a dedicated retro feel about it. Tintin might be on board, as well as Elton John, both sharing a cigar on the rear seats... ;)

Trader Joe's Grocery Store by Mike Mozart of JeepersMedia and TheToyChannel on YouTube.

Trader Joe's Grocery Store Food Market pics by Mike Mozart of JeepersMedia and TheToyChannel on YouTube.

businessmanï¼›merchantï¼›trader

 

peoples

15/10/20. Hong Kong.

 

Built: 1997

Builder:

Flag: Bergen, Norway

Gross tonnage: 21897 tons

 

Ship collection: www.flickr.com/photos/hhhumber/collections/72157630071766...

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