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Lunar eclipse
by Simon at 23:16 07/09/06 (Blogs::Simon)
The Moon rose partially eclipsed this evening, so here are a couple of photos for posterity.
Wide view of lunar eclipseWide view photocomp

Close up of lunar eclipseClose up photocomp

The files attached below are slightly higher resolution (800x600).

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simon

Attachments...
JPG image (68 K) Wide view
JPG image (70 K) Close up
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Lunar eclipse Simon - 23:16 07/09/06
Re: Lunar eclipse Bruce Ure - 06:51 08/09/06
Awesome photos, Simon!

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Re: Lunar eclipse David Crowson - 09:05 08/09/06
indeed, best moons pics I've seen in many a moon :)

I didn't get to see it, but I did see the fireworks associated with the launch of the first ship from Ports Dockyard for almost 40 years, HMS Clyde (pretty poor fireworks display it was too, but hey ho, it was free and I hadn't been up Portsdown Hill in a very long time.)

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bombholio

HMS Clyde (was Re: Lunar eclipse) Simon - 09:17 08/09/06
Now that's a good looking ship - very Gerry Anderson!
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simon
Re: HMS Clyde (was Re: Lunar eclipse) David Crowson - 09:38 08/09/06
better pics here
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bombholio
Re: HMS Clyde (was Re: Lunar eclipse) Gordon Hundley - 20:20 10/09/06
Nice looking ship. There's a degree of irony in the name - are they planning to build HMS Solent in Port Glasgow?
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DrGoon
- Deleted User Account - 09:24 08/09/06
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Re: Lunar eclipse Simon - 09:38 08/09/06
Once again I'm hankering after a higher res, more 35mm-analogue-like camera, 'cos 4 megapixels, JPG file format and a dithery autofocus is really starting to be frustrating.

Infinity is infinity is infinity (as far as focusing goes) so f8 with 'mountain' option set (as opposed to 'flower') should be pin-sharp, not 'a bit fuzzy'.

Never had trouble taking crisp Moon shots with my old Practica MTL3, 300mm lens + 2x teleconverter - grrrr.

Still, at least I remembered to look with my eyes as well as the camera last night :-)
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simon

Re: Lunar eclipse Bruce Ure - 09:41 08/09/06
Would you like to borrow my spare SLR... a Fuji S2 Pro?

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Re: Lunar eclipse Simon - 09:54 08/09/06
That's exceptionally kind of you - I'd love to!
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simon
Re: Lunar eclipse Bruce Ure - 10:33 08/09/06
Another reason for a meet up sooner rather than later. Now I've finished moving back to Dukes Ave it should be easier. Although having said that, I've got running events the next three weekends, and a Landrover fixing weekend the one after that :-/

Perhaps the weekend of 7/8th Oct?

I could always bung it in the post.

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Re: Lunar eclipse Simon - 11:10 08/09/06
It's not that desperate :-) so don't put it in the post!

I'm also up to my ears with the central heating system work we've got going on at the moment, so when it's all settled down we can get together.

I'll pencil in the 7/8 Oct.
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simon

Re: Lunar eclipse Jonathan Tuppeny - 20:32 08/09/06
Great photos Simon.

What you up to with the central heating - new one or fixing up the existing one?
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jht

Re: Lunar eclipse Simon - 22:16 08/09/06
It's a brand new, from scratch (no copper or radiators in the house) installation.

Ongoing for 2 weeks now, up to 5 guys working here - a bit of a mammoth project :-)

The only viable option was oil-fired (no gas in the village), though we looked at ground source heat pumps (not enough land), pellet-burning stoves (not enough storage space and few UK fuel suppliers as yet) and LPG (ridiculously expensive).

The oil tank's a 1000 litre double skinned, 7' x 5' x 2' green plastic monster (the smallest they do) and had to be lugged by four workmen and me up the neighbour's garden, over the barbed wire fence into the field, then back over the fence into our garden because it wouldn't fit through the house or down the passageway and I didn't want to spend £1000/day for a crane to lift it over the house. It is not lightweight.

Neither is the condensing, high efficiency, oil-fired boiler (600 lb deadweight) which the delivery man handily left at the bottom of the path.

This now lives in what was the outside toilet (cleared out and painted) by dint of using wooden ramps and three copper pipe rollers (with wooden dowels inside to prevent collapse) to get it up the step and through the front door, thence upon a cardboard and dustsheet sledge and three of us slid it down the hall and through into the kitchen.

Yea verily and aha, 'twas then levered up on to three 3"x2" beams acting as a bridge betwixt the back step and the privy and lo! the same rollers served again.

Well, it was a bit of a saga - glad I didn't have to haul it here from the Preseli Mountains ;-)

The pressurised 50 gallon, twin 12KW heat exchanger (one for the oil boiler, the other for the solar panels going on the roof - planning permission, er, permitting) hot water cylinder lives in the - also cleared and painted - outside storage room next to the boiler, along with a lot of pipework.

Meanwhile, (well you did ask!), the oil tank needs a platform to live on, a foot larger than the tank itself and surrounded by a concrete firewall a foot taller than it to prevent the thing catching fire if the fence it's next to should ever ignite %-/

So a section of bank between the outhouse and the rest of the garden has been cleared of debris and excavated (by hand, and electric jackhammer) to accommodate the platform.

Something like 4 tons of chalk now lives in bags on the patio - we've enough for our own henge. The good news (for us, not the workmen) is that 2/3 of the height of the bank is solid chalk, with about 18" of earth on top of it which means putting a retaining wall up across the whole width is going to be less of a problem than we thought (it only needs to hold back 18" of earth rather than 5') - but that's a whole other project.

One of the steel-reinforced concrete firewall posts cracked after being set into the ground. There are three of these in holes dug a further 12" down through the chalk and 6" into the bedrock which underlies it, around the platform.

Incidentally, the firewall is only on two sides - fence and garden - the third side is the back wall of the outhouse with its window now being bricked up and the fourth side is open.

Anyway, the knackered post meant they had to dig out and replace it which involved re-excavating its posthole previously filled with "postcrete" - fast setting very hard stuff. Ever tried drilling concrete out of bedrock? I gather it's not particularly easy.

The guys have done all this with very good humour, and everything's about halfway finished now.

Here's a few photos - I really ought to blog this properly when I get a moment.

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simon

Attachments...
JPG image (27 K) 1
JPG image (19 K) 2
JPG image (20 K) 3
JPG image (18 K) 4
JPG image (23 K) 5
JPG image (27 K) 3a
Re: Lunar eclipse Jonathan Tuppeny - 10:17 09/09/06
Whoa - major project.

Will you be having a house warming? :-)
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jht

Re: Lunar eclipse Simon - 11:11 09/09/06
We'd damn well better :-)
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simon
Re: Lunar eclipse Bruce Ure - 20:51 09/09/06
Great project. Must have been fun solving the various puzzles.

I bet 'firewall' has brought the odd smile.

Tecchie installing boiler: Sorry, I'll be a bit late -- one of the posts for the firewall's cracked.

Tecchie on other end of phone: Er....?

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