Liebherr 922 Hi-Cab Rubber-tired Hydraulic Excavator
Nov 9, 2024 5:00:48 GMT
hmca and Lillias like this
Post by BuckSkin on Nov 9, 2024 5:00:48 GMT
Kinder Morgan Barge Transloading Facility
As of 2024 Now = Superior River Terminals Indiana - SRTI
Ohio River Mile-post 597.2 - Indiana Port Authority
Port of Indiana – Jeffersonville - Clark County - Indiana
Monday_28-July-2014
Liebherr 922 Hi-Cab Rubber-tired Hydraulic Excavator
Notice how much higher the cab is than is normally seen.
This one has had the digging bucket replaced with the single tine grab-fork that you see.
On the ground is what appears to be an electro-magnetic attachment.
Most of these are equipped with Hi-Rail gear; I cannot see under this one enough to tell whether it is there or not.
Check out Satellite View at these coordinates:
38.316405 -85.665125 136.5504 m 448'
NOTE about a very helpful way that I used Elements Layering ability on this series of jpegs.
All taken in 2014 and original jpegs stored on a HDD in an external enclosure and just now getting around to loading them with information and editing them.
Iran against a snag in that the old original jpegs refused any attempts at adding metadata of any kind; I could go through the motions and everything would look like things were happening and then check the jpegs and the new information just was not there, no matter what I tried nor which program I used.
I have never ran against such behavior before.
So, after a bit of head scratching and a near nervous breakdown, I came upon a solution.
First, we all know that the bottom/Background layer in any stack governs the metadata content of the finished product; any metadata on any added layers is ignored.
My experience is Elements is not the greatest when it comes to handling metadata without either corrupting it or leaving some out --- but, Elements can do layers.
DxO Photolab II, on the other hand, is excellent at preserving accurate metadata; but, DxO doesn't do layers.
I tried one of my recalcitrant jpegs in DxO and all the original data came through in the finished product intact.
I was then able to add and edit metadata in the DxO image to a fare-the-well.
Always adamant about preserving the original, and in this case all I had were the original jpegs, I loaded the DxO images, complete with all my newly added information, into Elements 7.
I also loaded their original jpeg mates - the ones that will not accept metadata changes.
I duplicated all the DxO Background layers so I would not lose my DxO edits.
I drug the original jpegs into my DxO layer stack in between the two DxO layers.
I then merged the original jpeg layers onto the DxO Background layer.
I now had a 2-layered stack with a now-repaired copy of the original as Background layer and my DxO edited layer on top.
When I finished my Elements edits and saved the results, all my meticulously added and edited metadata was right there just like I wanted and these image files don't refuse further metadata manipulations.
And, if I ever want good workable copies of the originals, I can save them from the layered PSD files.
As of 2024 Now = Superior River Terminals Indiana - SRTI
Ohio River Mile-post 597.2 - Indiana Port Authority
Port of Indiana – Jeffersonville - Clark County - Indiana
Monday_28-July-2014
Liebherr 922 Hi-Cab Rubber-tired Hydraulic Excavator
Notice how much higher the cab is than is normally seen.
This one has had the digging bucket replaced with the single tine grab-fork that you see.
On the ground is what appears to be an electro-magnetic attachment.
Most of these are equipped with Hi-Rail gear; I cannot see under this one enough to tell whether it is there or not.
Check out Satellite View at these coordinates:
38.316405 -85.665125 136.5504 m 448'
NOTE about a very helpful way that I used Elements Layering ability on this series of jpegs.
All taken in 2014 and original jpegs stored on a HDD in an external enclosure and just now getting around to loading them with information and editing them.
Iran against a snag in that the old original jpegs refused any attempts at adding metadata of any kind; I could go through the motions and everything would look like things were happening and then check the jpegs and the new information just was not there, no matter what I tried nor which program I used.
I have never ran against such behavior before.
So, after a bit of head scratching and a near nervous breakdown, I came upon a solution.
First, we all know that the bottom/Background layer in any stack governs the metadata content of the finished product; any metadata on any added layers is ignored.
My experience is Elements is not the greatest when it comes to handling metadata without either corrupting it or leaving some out --- but, Elements can do layers.
DxO Photolab II, on the other hand, is excellent at preserving accurate metadata; but, DxO doesn't do layers.
I tried one of my recalcitrant jpegs in DxO and all the original data came through in the finished product intact.
I was then able to add and edit metadata in the DxO image to a fare-the-well.
Always adamant about preserving the original, and in this case all I had were the original jpegs, I loaded the DxO images, complete with all my newly added information, into Elements 7.
I also loaded their original jpeg mates - the ones that will not accept metadata changes.
I duplicated all the DxO Background layers so I would not lose my DxO edits.
I drug the original jpegs into my DxO layer stack in between the two DxO layers.
I then merged the original jpeg layers onto the DxO Background layer.
I now had a 2-layered stack with a now-repaired copy of the original as Background layer and my DxO edited layer on top.
When I finished my Elements edits and saved the results, all my meticulously added and edited metadata was right there just like I wanted and these image files don't refuse further metadata manipulations.
And, if I ever want good workable copies of the originals, I can save them from the layered PSD files.