Showing 3 items
matching landing lamp
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National Vietnam Veterans Museum (NVVM)
Manual, Royal Australian Air Force, Royal Australian Air Force: Landing Lamp Type J (Rotax)
... Royal Australian Air Force: Landing Lamp Type J (Rotax)...Landing Lamp... Publication Landing Lamp 2 Sqn a blue cardboard cover with black ...a blue cardboard cover with black information on the frint. Top right hand corner handwritten reads 2 Sqn - 1. Under this reads Australian Air Publication 7842.034-3. Above the RAAF insignia reads Royal Australian Air Force and under the insignia are the details of the manual. There are two metal staples and three punch holes down the left hand side.royal australian airforce - manuals, australian air publication, landing lamp, 2 sqn -
Moorabbin Air Museum
Document (item) - Collection of photocopied Bristol Beaufort cross-section diagrams
... Cross sections labelled: Landing lamps, side view of nose... Moorabbin melbourne Cross sections labelled: Landing lamps, side ...Cross sections labelled: Landing lamps, side view of nose, tail and fuselage sections, top view of tail wing sections, centre wing formers, and an unnamed set of front-on cross-sections of the fuselage. -
Robin Boyd Foundation
Slide, Robin Boyd, 1950
Penleigh Boyd, Robin and Patricia Boyd's son, writes “Prior to 1950 Robin, like most other amateur or hobby photographers, took black and white printed photographs. The oldest slides date from 1950 when Robin and Patricia travelled to Europe on Robin’s Robert Haddon Travelling Scholarship.” In 1948 Robin Boyd was awarded ‘joint first place’ in the Robert Haddon competition for his design of Mildura art gallery. The scholarship helped fund their first overseas trip. Robin and Patricia were passengers on the Greek ship “Cyrenia” departing in May 1950, passing through the Suez Canal and landing in Genoa five weeks later. For six months, they travelled extensively throughout Europe (predominantly driving themselves) - France, Italy, United Kingdom, Sweden, Denmark, Germany, Austria, Switzerland and Spain.Colour slide in a mount. Living room of architect Bent Karlby's home in Ordrup, Copenhagen, Denmark. Note, Karlby's Peanut Pendant Lamp (1946) - centre top. (Architect: Bent Karlby .)Copenhagen / Ordrup / Karlby, arch / Own home - Living room / 1950 (Handwritten)haddon travelling scholarship, haddon, robin boyd, slide