Sunday, May 31, 2015
1960s Citroen DS advert, UK
Clearly 26.9 miles per gallon was a notable figure at the time, it is not so notable today. This is imperial gallons: 1 imperial gallon = 4.3 litres, whereas a U.S. gallon = 3.82 litres. DIN is usually a reference to Deutsche Industrie Norm, but that doesn't make sense here.
Saturday, May 30, 2015
LKAB train near Riksgränsen, Sweden
A pair of Bombardier built IORE class electrics not far from Riksgränsen, the Sweden/Norway border station on the Malmbane or iron ore railway, see earlier posts.
road transport for the Great Western Railway, UK, 1931
A fleet of 219 trucks -- oops, lorries -- about to be delivered to the GWR, seen at the Dennis factory in Guildford.
Coca-Cola and Führer Icecream delivery vehicles, India
Well, India is where the swastika came from... More here
And while on the subject...
Probably vanilla only, no chocolate...
Friday, May 29, 2015
post-WW2 BMW 327 art
At least that's what we think it is meant to be, as created by Mads Berg for a Franks Original cayenne sauce ad.
'No parking or standing' art
One would assume that for car drivers 'No Parking' would be implicit in 'No Standing'. A girl is painting autumnal foliage on a wall as shadow for the bare tree. Art credited to Guy Shield, which looks to be set in Sydney.
'Fiducia' type tram at the terminus of the Karori line, 1947
The clock on the post stayed there for many years afterwards. For lots more, see the book Wellington Transport Memories.
1961 Vauxhall Victor drawing
As produced by Sanitarium on a Weetbix card. According to the back, the car was a 4-cylinder producing 55 b.h.p., had a maximum speed of 75 mph (120 km/h) with a three-speed forward gearbox.
English Ford at war, 1945
The cover of a 96 page booklet that Ford, England, produced at the end of WW2 describing what it produced for the war effort, presumably depicting a line up of vehicles awaiting transport on a train at its Dagenham plant.
more Århus trams, Denmark
As can be seen on the postmark, these lasted from 1904 to 1971, see earlier post. Today you can only see operating Danish trams in the museum mentioned.
Thursday, May 28, 2015
Wednesday, May 27, 2015
building rail tracks through the Congo, early 20th century
Or "Great Belgium" as it is referred to here in this Liebig "tomato concentrate" card. Albert Thys arrived there in 1887 and promoted the Matadi-Léopoldville Railway, which was built from 1890 to 1898. He imposed a route by the south, deviating from the Congo river. See earlier posts.
bush tram scene near Dannevirke, early 20th century
Or a logging railroad as they are known in the U.S. No train in sight, but it looks nice anyway. For more, see our books.
Tuesday, May 26, 2015
ship 'Berlin' (1908)
Statistics
Tonnage: 16,786 GRT
Length: 613 ft (187 metres)
Beam: 69 ft 8 in (21.23 metres)
Propulsion: Quadruple expansion steam engines, 16,000 ihp (11,931 kW), 2 screws
Speed: 19 knots (35 km/h; 22 mph)
Capacity: 3,212 passengers:
266 × 1st class
246 × 2nd class
2,700 × 3rd class
Crew: 410
Japanese 2-8-2
Japanese National Railways 2-8-2 class D52 number 335 seen in 1963 in Kozo. The design of the D52 was based on the D51 which was launched in 1936. A total of 285 D52 locomotives were built over 1943-1946.
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