SAR033393 SCOTLAND (1958). South of Scotland Electricity Board Rutherglen, Lanarkshire, Scotland. An oblique aerial photograph taken facing East. This image was marked by AeroPictorial Ltd for photo editing.

© Copyright OpenStreetMap contributors and licensed by the OpenStreetMap Foundation. 2025. Cartography is licensed as CC BY-SA.

Nearby Images (16)

SAR014770
  0° 0m
SAR014771
  0° 0m
SAR018024
  0° 0m
SAR018025
  0° 0m
SAR019246
  0° 0m
SAR033389
  0° 0m
SAR033390
  0° 0m
SAR033393
  0° 0m
SPW056005
  0° 0m
SPW056006
  0° 0m
SPW056008
  0° 0m
SPW056011
  0° 0m
SPW056007
  349° 111m
SPW056009
  349° 111m
SPW056010
  349° 111m
SPW056012
  349° 111m

Details

Title [SAR033393] South of Scotland Electricity Board Rutherglen, Lanarkshire, Scotland. An oblique aerial photograph taken facing East. This image was marked by AeroPictorial Ltd for photo editing.
Reference SAR033393
Date 1958
Link Canmore Collection item 1438610
Place name
Parish GLASGOW (CITY OF GLASGOW)
District CITY OF GLASGOW
Country SCOTLAND
Easting / Northing 261610, 662760
Longitude / Latitude -4.2101268772285, 55.838210379039
National Grid Reference NS616628

Pins

A second front blade caterpillar pushing coal to the conveyor system.

John Wass
Sunday 31st of May 2015 09:27:36 PM
Front blade caterpillar pushing coal to the conveyor system.

John Wass
Sunday 31st of May 2015 09:27:14 PM
Front blade caterpillar pushing coal to the conveyor system.

John Wass
Sunday 31st of May 2015 09:27:14 PM
Front blade caterpillar pushing coal to the conveyor system.

John Wass
Sunday 31st of May 2015 09:27:14 PM
Front blade caterpillar pushing coal to the conveyor system.

John Wass
Sunday 31st of May 2015 09:26:56 PM
Power station's own diesel shunter.

John Wass
Sunday 31st of May 2015 09:22:07 PM
Empty coal wagons from the tipper are rolled onto this traverser which switches them sideways onto the next track to be coupled up again to be returned.

John Wass
Sunday 31st of May 2015 09:21:13 PM
Two wagon tippers for unloading coal. The railway wagons are rolled over some 100 degrees or so and 12 tons of coal is discharged in moments.

John Wass
Sunday 31st of May 2015 09:18:59 PM