telegraph post - translation to ελληνικό
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telegraph post - translation to ελληνικό

POST USED BY PUBLIC UTILITIES TO SUPPORT OVERHEAD WIRES AND RELATED EQUIPMENT
Power Pole; Telephone pole; Telegraph Post; Telegraph Posts; Telegraph pole; Telegraph post; Power pole; Electrical pole; Telephone poles; Hydro pole; Utility Pole; Pole route; Pole Route; Telegraph poles; Phone pole; Utility poles; Subtransmission lines; Electric post; Utility post
  • (video) Three [[aerial work platform]] trucks work together on utility poles, in [[Bunkyō]], Japan
  • Standard arrangement for telephone poles
  • Utility poles seen outside the Gardner Building, in [[Toledo, Ohio]], 1895
  • A joint-use utility pole in China
  • [[White stork]]s (''Ciconia ciconia'') in their nest on a utility pole in rural Romania
  • Dungannon]] in Northern Ireland.
  • Example of dead-end riser poles
  • From 1923, the oldest utility pole in Japan, still in use in the city of Hakodate.
  • Wooden electricity poles in Germany. In central Europe, lines usually run just straight across fields, rows of poles accompanying roads are quite rare.
  • A utility pole replacement in Saugus, Massachusetts, United States
  • Telegraph pole with spars, insulators and open wires on a now decommissioned Railway Pole Route, Eccles Road, [[Norfolk]], United Kingdom
  • The tags on a [[Delmarva Power]] subtransmission pole located in [[Crisfield, Maryland]], United States. The faded tag reads "733"
  • shoes]] can be seen hanging from the wires (center-left, far right)
  • Several power poles made of concrete
  • Darwin]], Australia
  • Pre-apprentice lineman class climbing telephone poles
  • Markings on a BT post
  • Typical North American utility pole, showing hardware for a residential 240/120&nbsp;V split-phase [[service drop]]: <span style="color:red;">(''A'',''B'',''C'')</span> 3-phase primary distribution wires, <span style="color:red;">(''D'')</span> neutral wire, <span style="color:red;">(''E'')</span> [[fuse cutout]], <span style="color:red;">(''F'')</span> lightning arrestor, <span style="color:red;">(''G'')</span> single-phase distribution transformer, <span style="color:red;">(''H'')</span> ground wire to transformer case, <span style="color:red;">(''J'')</span> "triplex" service drop cable carries secondary current to customer, <span style="color:red;">(''K'')</span> telephone and cable television cables
  • Poles in [[Ottawa, Ontario]], Canada
  • Tag and marking on the bottom of a wooden utility pole before it is installed

telegraph post         
τηλεγραφόξυλο
post office         
  • GPO]] in 1845
  • Students attend an unstaffed postal facility
  • [[Surathkal]] Post Office, India
  • Old post office in [[Toompea]] in [[Tallinn]], [[Estonia]]
  • West Toledo Branch Post Office in [[Toledo, Ohio]], in 1912
CUSTOMER SERVICE FACILITY OF A POSTAL SYSTEM
Post-office; Drop letter; Post offices; Post office branch; Mail office; Postal office; Postal clerk; 郵局; 🏤; Posting house; Post Office; Receiving office; Post office building; Receiving offices; The Post Office; Postoffice
ταχυδρομείο
telegraph office         
  • [[US Forest Service]] lookout using a Colomb shutter type heliograph in 1912 at the end of a telephone line
  • The Eastern Telegraph Company network in 1901
  • Western Union telegram (1930)
  • Great Wall of China
  • Western Desert]] in November 1940
  • Alexander Bain]]'s facsimile machine, 1850
  • A block signalling instrument as used in Britain in the 20th century
  • A Creed Model 7 teleprinter, 1931
  • 19th-century demonstration of the semaphore
  • A Baudot keyboard, 1884
  • 1835}}
  • Cooke and Wheatstone's]] five-needle, six-wire telegraph (1837)
  • Creed paper tape reader at [[The National Museum of Computing]]
  • An illustration declaring that the submarine cable between England and France would bring those countries peace and goodwill
  • An early Cooke and Wheatstone double-needle railway telegraph instrument at the [[National Railway Museum]]
  • ITT Creed Model 23B teleprinter with telex dial-up facility
  • St. John's, Newfoundland]], December 1901
  • 1900}})
  • Post Office Engineers inspect the [[Marconi Company]]'s equipment at [[Flat Holm]], May 1897
  • Foy–Breguet instrument]] in 1851. The equipment in the background is a Cooke and Wheatstone set for onward transmission.
LONG DISTANCE TRANSMISSION OF TEXT WITHOUT THE PHYSICAL EXCHANGE OF AN OBJECT
Telegraph; Telegrafy; Telegraphed; Telegrams; Telegram; Advantages of the telegraph; Cablegram; Telegramme; Telegraphic; Cablegrams; Cable gram; Cable grams; Teletypewriter message; RealTelex; History of telegraphy; Far writing; Telegraphic signal; Telegraph signal; Telegraph signalling; Telegraph signaling; Telegraphic communications; Telegraph station; Telegraph office; Fist (telegraphy)
τηλεγραφείο

Ορισμός

telephone pole
(telephone poles)
A telephone pole is a tall wooden pole with telephone wires attached to it, connecting several different buildings to the telephone system. (AM; in BRIT, use telegraph pole
)
N-COUNT

Βικιπαίδεια

Utility pole

A utility pole is a column or post typically made out of wood used to support overhead power lines and various other public utilities, such as electrical cable, fiber optic cable, and related equipment such as transformers and street lights. It can be referred to as a transmission pole, telephone pole, telecommunication pole, power pole, hydro pole, telegraph pole, or telegraph post, depending on its application. A Stobie pole is a multi-purpose pole made of two steel joists held apart by a slab of concrete in the middle, generally found in South Australia.

Electrical wires and cables are routed overhead on utility poles as an inexpensive way to keep them insulated from the ground and out of the way of people and vehicles. Utility poles can be made of wood, metal, concrete, or composites like fiberglass. They are used for two different types of power lines: sub transmission lines, which carry higher voltage power between substations, and distribution lines, which distribute lower voltage power to customers.

The first poles were used in 1843 by telegraph pioneer William Fothergill Cooke, who used them on a line along the Great Western Railway. Utility poles were first used in the mid-19th century in America with telegraph systems, starting with Samuel Morse, who attempted to bury a line between Baltimore and Washington, D.C., but moved it above ground when this system proved faulty. Today, underground distribution lines are increasingly used as an alternative to utility poles in residential neighborhoods, due to poles' perceived ugliness, as well as safety concerns in areas with large amounts of snow or ice build up.