Showing 147 items matching "cyclone"
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Moorabbin Air Museum
Manual (Item) - Wright Cyclone 9 Engines Instruction Book
Description: 150 pages. Published by RAAF. Published 23/2/1973. AC166. Nomad Light Utility Aircraft Specification Engineering Level of Importance: World. -
Moorabbin Air Museum
Booklet (item) - AAP 507 Operation and Service Manual Wright Cyclone 9 Engine
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Moorabbin Air Museum
Manual (Item) - CAC wright cyclone engine servicing overhaul USAAC cyclone 9 R2600 magnaflux demagnetiser R2000 tin row wasp engine, CAC E3 wright engine spare parts manufacture file 1
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Moorabbin Air Museum
Book (Item) - (SP) Engine Log Book Wright Cyclone R1820-202A No. 60149
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Moorabbin Air Museum
Manual (Item) - Wright Cyclone Series R-1820-65, 71, 73,87 & 97 Engines radial engines- servicing, Handbook of Service Instructions R1820-65,-71,-73,-87 and -97 Aircraft Engines
US Army Air Force -
Moorabbin Air Museum
Manual (Item) - Overhaul Tools for Wright Engines Cyclone E and F Conqueror Whirlwind J-6
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Moorabbin Air Museum
Manual (Item) - AP 1806A Vol 1 Buffalo Wright Cyclone GR1820-G105A Engine
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Moorabbin Air Museum
Manual (Item) - (SP) Wright Cyclone Engine R-1820-F & GR-1820-F Manual
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Moorabbin Air Museum
Manual (Item) - Instruction Book Wright Cyclone 9 Aircraft Engines, Coordinators manual
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Moorabbin Air Museum
Manual (Item) - Table of limits for Wright Cyclone Aircraft Engines, Coordinators manual
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Moorabbin Air Museum
Manual (Item) - Part Catalog for Wright Cyclone Engines R-11820-G (Excluding R-1820-G-100 Series)
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Moorabbin Air Museum
Manual (Item) - Overhaul Manual Wright Aircraft Engines Cyclone 9GC
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Moorabbin Air Museum
Manual (Item) - Tool Catalog for Wright Engines Cyclone F F-50 G G-100 Whirlwind J-6 (E Series)
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Moorabbin Air Museum
Booklet - Instruction Book Wright Cyclone 9 Aircraft Engines, Wright Aeronautical Corporation
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Moorabbin Air Museum
Book - Instructions for the Installation, Operation and Maintenance of the Wright Cyclone Aircraft Engine F Series, Wright Aeronautical Corporation
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Moorabbin Air Museum
Booklet - Instructions for the Installation, Operation and Maintenance of the Wright Cyclone Aircraft Engine F Series, Wright Aeronautical Corporation
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Moorabbin Air Museum
Manual (Item) - (SP) AAP RAAF Pub 507 Wright Cyclone 9 Aircraft Engines Operation and Service Manual 85 Beaufort Service Manual
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Moorabbin Air Museum
Manual (Item) - (SP) Wright Cyclone R-1820-G GR-1820-G and GR-1820-G100 - Installation Operation & Maintenance
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Moorabbin Air Museum
Manual (Item) - (SP) Wright Cyclone 9 Engines - Overhaul Manual - F-50 F-60 GA and GB Series
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Moorabbin Air Museum
Manual (Item) - (SP) AAP RAAF Pub 507 Wright Cyclone 9 Aircraft Engines - Operation and Service Manual
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Moorabbin Air Museum
Manual (Item) - (SP) Wright Cyclone R-1820-F and GR-1820-F - Installation Operation & Maintenance
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Moorabbin Air Museum
Manual (Item) - (SP) Wright Cyclone 9 - installation, operation & Maintenance C9GA & GB
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Moorabbin Air Museum
Manual (Item) - (SP) Wright Cyclone 14 - C14BA - Manual service & instruction
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Moorabbin Air Museum
Manual (Item) - (SP) Wright Cyclone Aircraft Engines Parts Catalog F50 series
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Moorabbin Air Museum
Manual (Item) - (SP) Wright Cyclone 9 - Tool Catalog
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Ithacan Historical Society
Photograph, Portside at Kioni, Ithaca, c1930s
Kioni is a small fishing village on Ithaca where caïque boats were used by fishermen and were once an important form of transport for goods and for people prior. The people in the photograph appear to be lined up along the water's edge awaiting a boat to arrive.A caïque (or kaiki) is a traditional handmade wooden fishing boat found among the waters of the Ionian or Aegean Sea and were once the main form of transport for the many Greek islands, moving people and goods across Greece's archipelago. In the 1980s and 1990s many were destroyed as a result of a European Union decision to subsidize fishermen to scrap their boats to tackle overfishing. Hundreds of beautiful and perfectly sound vessels ended up in landfills resulting in the loss of an integral part of Greece's long seafaring tradition and heritage. Sadly Cyclone Ianos which struck the island in September 2020 destroyed many of the remaining caiques on the island.A sepia photograph, which has a partial white border. The image has been affected by light across the bottom LH corner. The visible section shows a group of people lined up along the side of a wharf like structure. There are four two storey houses in the middle distance with a hillside in the background. -
Victorian Railway History Library
Book, Nick Anchen, Iron Roads in the Outback, 2017
The Iron Roads of the Australian Outback - the legendary Commonwealth Railways were built through some of the harshest landscapes on Earth. They were railways like no other, where men and women battled extreme temperatures, flash floods and maddening isolation to keep the trains running. This publication is the culmination of 25 years of Outback exploration, research, photography and interviews by author Nick Anchen. The result is a diverse book which brings to life both the beauty and harshness of the Australian Outback, through a collection of fascinating and historic images, along with the memories of former Commonwealth Railways employees. Following an introductory chapter on the vastness and grandeur of the Australian interior - highlighted by the memoirs of 1950s flying doctor Macarthur Job - the book delves into the story of the Central Australia Railway. This was the line built through the 'back of beyond' - the forbidding desert country of South Australia and the Northern Territory. It was here that operators of famous trains such as The Ghan battled searing heat, dust storms and raging floodwaters to keep the trains running. The chapter includes stories by well known Ghan conductor 'Aspro' Lyons, and 'Piano Playing Chef' Paddy Greenfield - along with enginemen Wolf Markowski and John Theel, both of whom worked trains on this famous railway. The story of the North Australia Railway - 'The Line to Nowhere' - is the tale of a ramshackle railway which came alive during the dark days of World War II. The memoirs of wartime engineman Jim Prentice are eye opening, as are the hair raising accounts of surviving Tropical Cyclone Tracy, as told by rolling stock foreman Bill Donaldson. The Trans-Australian Railway was built across one of the harshest and loneliest environments on Earth - the vast Nullarbor Plain. Stories from enginemen Jack Slattery and Ron Howrie, along with Nullarbor resident and roadmaster's wife Cathy Beek, tell not only of the rudimentary living conditions and maddening isolation, but of the great camaraderie amongst the railway people who kept trains such as the Trans-Australian and the Tea and Sugar running. As well as examining the ruins and relics from the long-closed CR narrow gauge lines, the book also includes a chapter on the much-loved Pichi Richi Railway - the last surviving portion of that great Transcontinental Railway dream from another age.ill, maps, p.208.non-fictionThe Iron Roads of the Australian Outback - the legendary Commonwealth Railways were built through some of the harshest landscapes on Earth. They were railways like no other, where men and women battled extreme temperatures, flash floods and maddening isolation to keep the trains running. This publication is the culmination of 25 years of Outback exploration, research, photography and interviews by author Nick Anchen. The result is a diverse book which brings to life both the beauty and harshness of the Australian Outback, through a collection of fascinating and historic images, along with the memories of former Commonwealth Railways employees. Following an introductory chapter on the vastness and grandeur of the Australian interior - highlighted by the memoirs of 1950s flying doctor Macarthur Job - the book delves into the story of the Central Australia Railway. This was the line built through the 'back of beyond' - the forbidding desert country of South Australia and the Northern Territory. It was here that operators of famous trains such as The Ghan battled searing heat, dust storms and raging floodwaters to keep the trains running. The chapter includes stories by well known Ghan conductor 'Aspro' Lyons, and 'Piano Playing Chef' Paddy Greenfield - along with enginemen Wolf Markowski and John Theel, both of whom worked trains on this famous railway. The story of the North Australia Railway - 'The Line to Nowhere' - is the tale of a ramshackle railway which came alive during the dark days of World War II. The memoirs of wartime engineman Jim Prentice are eye opening, as are the hair raising accounts of surviving Tropical Cyclone Tracy, as told by rolling stock foreman Bill Donaldson. The Trans-Australian Railway was built across one of the harshest and loneliest environments on Earth - the vast Nullarbor Plain. Stories from enginemen Jack Slattery and Ron Howrie, along with Nullarbor resident and roadmaster's wife Cathy Beek, tell not only of the rudimentary living conditions and maddening isolation, but of the great camaraderie amongst the railway people who kept trains such as the Trans-Australian and the Tea and Sugar running. As well as examining the ruins and relics from the long-closed CR narrow gauge lines, the book also includes a chapter on the much-loved Pichi Richi Railway - the last surviving portion of that great Transcontinental Railway dream from another age. commonwealth railways (australia) -- history., central australia railway -- history.