Auto M14 Airsoft : Airsoft Gilly : P99 Co2 Airsoft.
Auto M14 Airsoft
Airsoft refers to a class of replica air powered guns that originated from Japan (although the origins go back to the US in the 70s). The power levels are way below those of traditional airguns, but the guns are 1:1 scale copies of original pistols, rather than original designs.
A modern combat sport in which participants eliminate their opponents by hitting them with spherical non-metallic pellets launched from a compressed-air gun
Airsoft is primarily a recreational activity with replica firearms that shoot plastic BBs that are often used for personal collection, gaming (similar to paintball), or professional training purposes (military simulations, a.k.a. MilSim, and police training exercises).
An automobile
Oram Po is a Tamil comedy film starring Arya and Pooja. The film, directed by the debutant duo, Pushkar-Gayatri, is produced by V. Palanivel and A.C. Anandan for A.P. Film Garden. G. V. Prakash Kumar of Veyyil fame is the music director.
car: a motor vehicle with four wheels; usually propelled by an internal combustion engine; "he needs a car to get to work"
Auto is a sub-genre of Dramatic Literature. It has its origin in the Middle Ages, in Spain, by the 12th century. In Portugal, in the 16th century, Gil Vicente is the main author of this type of dramatic genre. Luís de Camões and Dom Francisco Manuel de Mello also adopted this form of writing.
M14, M-14, or M.14 may refer to: * M-14 highway (Michigan), a road connecting Ann Arbor and Detroit * M14 (New York City bus) * M14 mine, a United States anti-personnel landmine * AN/M14 incendiary grenade, a United States incendiary grenade
* M14 rifle, a United States military rifle
* Chery
Messier 14 (also known as M14 or NGC 6402) is a globular cluster in the constellation Ophiuchus. It was discovered by Charles Messier in 1764.
The Second Avenue Line is a public transit line in Manhattan, New York City, United States, running mostly along Second Avenue (and northbound on First Avenue since 1951) from Lower Manhattan to East Harlem.
RB Auto Graflex Camera - Delta Reflex Camera - Eastman House
The camera on the left is the RB Auto Graflex (owned by Alfred Stieglitz) Folmer & Schwing, Division of Eastman Kodak Co, Rochester, NY --ca. 1907, a gift of Georgia OKeeffe. American photographer Alfred Stieglitz used this camera, and although the Folmer & Schwing Auto Graflex 4 x 5-inch camera may not have been a joy to behold, he found its versatility quite useful. There was no polished wood, shiny brass, or luxurious Russia leather on this single-lens reflex field piece but Stieglitz said, he needed a work horse not a showhorse. The Auto Graflex with the Goerz Celor 8 1/2-inch f/5 lens and reliable focal-plane shutter had enough flexability to grab images of fast action or capture the splendor of the Manhattan skyine as well as enduring the rigors of hard travel which was exactly what Stieglitz needed in a camera. On the right is the Delta Reflex (owned by Alvin Langdon Coburn)-- J. F. Shew & C., London, England--ca. 1910, Bequest of Alvin Langdon Coburn. In the 1900s the single-lens reflex hand camera became popular with serious photographers and remained so in the decades to come. Most were similar to the Delta Reflex 3 1/4 x 4 1/4 inch revolving back model made by J. F. Shew of London in 1909. A tall leather viewing hood unfolded for sighting the image from the lens, reflected by an angled mirror onto a ground glass screen. This permitted the photographer to adjust the rack-and-pinion focus for the sharpest possible image. Howerver, pictorialists like Alvin Langdon Coburn whose camera is displayed here wanted a somewhat diffused image for the entire depth and used "soft-focus" lenses like those made by Pinkham & Smith of Boston. Coburn used P & S Semi-Achromatic lenses to make his artistic portraits and landscape scenes. Both of these cameras are part of the Technology Collection in the International Museum of Photography & Fim at the George Eastman House and Gardens, 900 East Ave in Rochester, NY.