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Kolovoz 2011 (20)

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31.08.2011., srijeda

Pool Filter O Ring


POOL FILTER O RING : DIAMOND VINTAGE ENGAGEMENT RING.


pool filter o ring







    pool filter
  • (POOL FILTERS) May filter dirt from the water at the cartridge surface or allow penetration of smaller suspended particles into internal interstices.





    o ring
  • a gasket consisting of a flat ring of rubber or plastic; used to seal a joint against high pressure

  • (O-Rings) are generally used as dynamic seals for shafts and are available in many different sizes and materials.

  • A gasket in the form of a ring with a circular cross section, typically made of pliable material, used to seal connections in pipes, tubes, etc

  • An O-ring, also known as a packing, or a toric joint, is a mechanical gasket in the shape of a torus; it is a loop of elastomer with a disc-shaped cross-section, designed to be seated in a groove and compressed during assembly between two or more parts, creating a seal at the interface.











pool filter o ring - HAYWARD XSTREAM


HAYWARD XSTREAM POOL FILTER BODY, O-RING - CCX1000G



HAYWARD XSTREAM POOL FILTER BODY, O-RING - CCX1000G





No. 14 Image Shown AboveCCX1000G Hayward XStream Body, O-Ring Used on Hayward XStream Cartridge Filter Series Replacement PartsHayward is a common name in pool filter parts. The schematic diagram of filter parts, Hayward pool filter parts, Hayward Products, Hayward filter parts and spares (spare filter parts) are listed. Always low prices and fast shipping. Discount Hayward Pro Series, Perflex Series, Super Star-Clear, ASL Series, Easy-Clear, Micro-Clear,Star-Clear II, Star-Clear Plus and ReGenX swimming pool filter parts and other swimming pool filter parts are always in stock and available.Back To Hayward XStream Cartridge Filter Series Replacement Parts






87% (7)










1935 Murder in Hanham Woods




1935 Murder in Hanham Woods







Mrs Bessie Gladys Nott in her slum shack dwelling made of timber with mud walls in Hanham Woods, South Gloucestershire, 1931 - the depression of the 1930's seemed endless little or no work, poor housing, poor food, poor health, drudgery and hopelessness.

Petty crime is rife in the area. Many young Kingswood men end their lives on the gallows. It becomes a Kingswood custom to exhibit the corpses of the executed at the roadside to collect money for funeral expenses from passers-by.

Kingswood a 'centre of organised villainy'. Almost half the petty crime in the entire county of Gloucester committed by people who lived in or around the parish of Bitton. A judge remarks testily that he believes he has already hanged everybody from the place. Kingswood Association set up at the Flower Pot inn,Kingswood Hill to suppress the crime wave.

These erect squatters cottages all over Kingswood. Adding to Kingswood's reputation as a lawless area.

In 1935, a murder was committed amongst the poor of Hanham Woods, revealing living conditions that were reminiscent of squatters in the last century.

In the 1930’s, there were various families living in the woods. There were two brothers by the name of Franklin whose origins were unknown. Living on the opposite side of the track was the Nott family a husband, wife and one son. And at one period, Mrs Nott moved to the Franklin brothers’ home.

No one knows why. It was a closed shop — no one interfered down there. Eventually Mrs Nott moved back with her husband. There ensued a row, and one day Frank Nott came across to see Franklin, who came out of his shack with a gun and fired at Nott, and knocked his eye out. Franklin went back into the hut and killed Mrs Nott. He was arrested and taken to Horfield Prison.

Murder of Bessie Gladys Nott on a May Morning 1935

Later the primary witness reflected that it had been ' a perfect May morning. The early sun had filtered through the trees, spotlighting the dwellings that had been erected there on the slopes of Hencliffe Wood. The papers were to write about the place as if it were a shanty town. The Evening Post stated 'The scene of the drama is a curious backwoods collection of scattered cabins - they can hardly be called houses - in which live a numerous population, most of them eking out a hard existence on the land as smallholders and farm labourers'. The Notts' place was referred to as 'a tiny one-roomed cottage' and the Franklins' home as 'a similar cottage'. The truth was rather different.

The children who grew up there loved the woods and living arrangements were not as basic as the press would lead us to suppose. This was no squalid collection of primitive makeshift shacks but homes of which the residents were proud as witness the names they called these homes - The Nook, Woodbine Cottage, Rose Cottage. The children were clean and tidy and attended the local church school at Hanham. The residents were not 'eking out a living' but were pig farmers, kept large coops of fowls and, in the summer months, Mr and Mrs Dyer had a little shop by the river where they sold cigarettes, sweets, lemonade and cockles to passers-by either strolling along the river path or enjoying an afternoon boating.

Prior to the Enclosure Act of 1827 all of this was common land and many squatters lived here. This was before the Avon was made navigable upstream to Bath with the opening of Hanham Lock in 1727 at a time when Bickley Wood began to be quarried for stone. The Netham Dam was completed in 1805 and the Feeder Canal was opened which meant the river could be used for transportation both up and downstream and it was at this time that extensive quarrying began in both Hencliffe and Conham woods. After the Bitton Enclosure Act came into force the land was parcelled up into various portions and sold to anyone who could prove a right of use. Initially the main landowner was Samuel Whittuck of Hanham Hall although John Couch claimed some of the land.

After their death the bulk of Hencliffe Wood became the property of the wealthy Richard Haynes whose family seat was Wick Court. On his death in 1919 all his property, in Bristol and London, was placed in the hands of the Chancery Court and a Bristol firm of solicitors were given the task of disposing of the Bristol estates and Victor Osmond was appointed as the Vendor's Agent. It was then that Hencliffe Wood was sold off at a very low figure with deeds carelessly worded and boundaries indistinctly defined and, with the passing years many families did not bother to uphold their claims. In the 1970s Kingswood Council, as it was then known, acquired much of the land.

There were quite a few families living there by 1935. The Littles, the Salters, the Byes, the Robins and the Osmonds were all near neighbours of the Dyers. Mr Elmore had cultivated a piece of land down by the water's edge where he lived in solitude. The Francoms had begun by raising their family of twelve in a little cottage at the top













it takes a puddle




it takes a puddle







sometimes it takes a puddle to calm down a really busy foreground.
sometimes a busy foreground just can't be avoided.
sometimes it's just a pleasure to get out shooting in the first place :o).

i'm still coming to grips with the b&w nd110 and felt pretty comfortable with it today. i even combined it with some gnd filters to see how it would go. it takes a while to compose the shot...then work out the exposure...then screw on the b&w filter...then screw in the connecting ring for the cokin filters...and then finally to guess the graduation...well you get the idea.

makes you appreciate getting an exposure at all :o).

60s | iso100 | f/22 | 10mm

u-ziq...grizzly bear | veckatimest











pool filter o ring







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