Sun, Nov 17, 2:42 AM CST

Taking Your Temperature

Photography Monochrome/Black and White posted on May 09, 2014
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Description


See the little round thing on top of the radiator cap? All the driver of a 1914 Fiat had to do to check his/her engine temperature was look at the gizmo on top of the radiator cap...if red showed in the little round window, the engine was overheating...a very common malady in early automobiles. Note: Fiat built automobiles in the USA in Poughkeepsie, New York from 1908 until 1918.

Comments (19)


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giulband

11:18AM | Fri, 09 May 2014

Great image for its historical value and very fine realization in ancient hue!!

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kgb224

11:48AM | Fri, 09 May 2014

Superb capture my friend. God bless.

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durleybeachbum

12:15PM | Fri, 09 May 2014

If Tara and you get to stay with me one day we will have an outing to the Beaulieu Motor Museum and the aircraft museum at Hurn, double bliss for you.

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aksirp

12:45PM | Fri, 09 May 2014

and some time it was boiling:-) great monochrome and old FIAT!

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FredNunes

2:49PM | Fri, 09 May 2014

Excellent, Bill.

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jayfar

2:54PM | Fri, 09 May 2014

Great shot and explanation Bill

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Faemike55

4:05PM | Fri, 09 May 2014

Outstanding capture Bill very cool? idea

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auntietk

5:40PM | Fri, 09 May 2014

Great composition and dof ... it makes for a wonderful abstract! Oh ... it's a car? Yes ... well ... that's nice, dear! :*

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flavia49

6:15PM | Fri, 09 May 2014

wonderful

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goodoleboy

6:44PM | Fri, 09 May 2014

Nice monolike shot of the antique Fiat with the thermometer on top of its radiator, Bill. I didn't know Fiat had been around that long.

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Adobe_One_Kenobi

8:01AM | Sat, 10 May 2014

Now it's a light on the dash, that you rearly pay attention too or is obscured by the steering column. Today of course the same device would be digital, expensive, and not fitted as standard. Excellent work buddy.

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CarolusB

9:39AM | Sat, 10 May 2014

Brilliant piece of historical trivia - and now that they have merged with cHrysler, they might do so again (I think they want to expand their Alfa Romeo brand in N America). Picture is brill too ;-))

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T.Rex

10:02AM | Sat, 10 May 2014

Oh, so THAT's what that thing-a-ma-jig was! I've seen it when I was a kid back in the 1950s but never knew. Thanks for the post and the explanation! :-)

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Sea_Dog

2:11PM | Sat, 10 May 2014

Very nice shot. It has an antique feel that matches the subject perfectly.

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jendellas

4:26PM | Sat, 10 May 2014

What Andrea says is so true, you would love Beaulieu. X

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MrsRatbag

7:23PM | Sat, 10 May 2014

How cool this is, and I love it in mono. I guess automotive design took care of that problem early on, we hardly even glance at the temperature gauges now! Great shot!

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RodS Online Now!

9:54PM | Sat, 10 May 2014

What a cool shot of this heat-detecting bit of older technology! Wonderful detail, and the slightly sepia toned B&W really gives it a historic feel! An excellent capture, Bill!

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debbielove

6:24AM | Sat, 17 May 2014

What a super shot! Love the neat way you decide, back n white was the way to show it.. Thanks for the info as well.. Rob

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anahata.c

2:47AM | Fri, 06 June 2014

Fascinating record of a long-gone device (the thermometer). It's also a beautiful device. Classy looking, up there at the helm. As a photo, it's a big splash of chrome-y collisions, intersecting lines, sepia-gold shadows and a big logo and grill dominating in front. A big glittering collection of car-dom, and I really like this shot---a "glorious din," as one friend would call it. A photo like this emphasizes the collision of forms and the 'din' of all that reflective chrome and steel; you let the metal just do its thing, colliding, rushing around, each piece angling for its 'shot', the un-focussed areas suddenly becoming generic 'parts', machine as abstraction...and you put it in sepia tones which gives an aged gold patina to the thing. I really like this! An old car street-fest. A giddy carnival-like upload.


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Photograph Details
F Numberf/4.5
MakeCanon
ModelCanon EOS 5D Mark III
Shutter Speed1/160
ISO Speed25600
Focal Length70

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