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locking barの例文

例文モバイル版携帯版

  • It is a lockback folder with a switch that can prevent the locking bar from being depressed.
  • Passengers are restrained by a shoulder harness, as well as a secondary locking bar across their laps.
  • The freighter had a total of 32 hatches; each hatch required individual attention with locking bars, clamps, and tackle.
  • Locking bars should have prevented these points from being changed as the signal ahead of the Scarborough was set to clear.
  • When the switch is closed the flange on the rod slides under tip of the locking bar at the butt end.
  • The streamlined bolt sleeves contain a locking bar mechanism to prevent accidental rotation when the bolt is removed from the receiver.
  • The radiator, which in the four-cylinder cars was mounted behind the bonnet-locking bar was now placed in front of the bonnet-locking bar, immediately behind the grille.
  • The radiator, which in the four-cylinder cars was mounted behind the bonnet-locking bar was now placed in front of the bonnet-locking bar, immediately behind the grille.
  • But the family friend said Friday that the case had both an outer lock and a locking bar on the inside that secured the rifles to the back of the case.
  • This therefore disengaged the locking bar on the points for a few seconds before the Scarborough train reached it, allowing them to be changed by the application of the wrong lever.
  • The Second Model 26.5 differed in that it used a long, thick metal locking bar with a turned-down bolt-handle, like the metal bolt on a bolt-action rifle, which locked into a recess machined into the frame.
  • Levers work signals by means of metal cables, the frame itself is very complicated in that it employs a series of horizontal moving locking bars in order to interlock different levers making it impossible to, for instance, signal a train to run over a point set the wrong way.
  • It ignores the block system, it will have nothing to do with trans staff or train tablet, but works its traffic . . . on the old-fashioned system of telegraphic crossing orders; its facing points are often unprovided with locking bars, in some cases they are not even interlocked with the signals.