Previous photo Old Saint Nicholas Coal Breaker | Driven Next photo
Tagged

Tagged

Bookmark and Share More info
comments

Please remember that the comments posted here are not the opinions of opacity.us or its affiliates.

How 'bout that? Tags we don't mind seeing, for once. ;-)
Not many circuits but they are all 220volts
I love the focus on this one . . .

The composition is lovely. To be cliche, it could work very well as cover art.
It looks as if it has sprouted arms. :)
Are those tags paper? If so, I bet they'd disintegrate if you so much as breathed on them.
what r the tags for
Interesting: Some of them tripped, but others are not.
Also: Is this the inside of the "box" featured earlier in this gallery?
I'd say no, Dylan.... too many scratches on the bottom under the door.

Comparison: http://www.opacity.us/...60_blue_and_rust.htm

Just my opinion...
Be nice to frame this one!
Tags were to tell which piece of machinery was connected to which curcuit,so they knew which breaker to throw to shut down one certain machine
I love that the tag still hang there, all these years later. They're closed in that box, so they haven't been destroyed by sunlight...very neat little thing to find.
Did ya throw any switches motts? I would have.
someone didn't pay the electric bill
try turning some on,see if theres power there.
Im betting this is not up to code.....lol
Wow, it likely would only take one sneeze (mini tornado) to make those disappear. I'm almost surprised there wasn't a better labeling system.

Comments pertaining to real location names, methods of entering the property, promotions or advertisements, off-topic discussion and general flaming, as well as those submitted under various aliases are subject to immediate deletion and your ip address being banned from this website. By submitting your comment you agree to these terms. Visit the forum for off-topic and general discussion. To prevent your comment from being removed and to help keep this site uncluttered, please read more about comments on opacity.

Memories and stories from past employees, visitors or patients are gratefully welcomed, they help keep these places alive!

 
Previous photo Old Saint Nicholas Coal Breaker | Driven Next photo