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| Image created by Grok |
Saturday, November 29, 2025
Airbus A320 Incident, Air Travel and Cosmic Radiation
Friday, November 28, 2025
Kilcullen Market House?
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| Excerpt from the c. 1837 6" first edition OSI map. Courtesy Tailte Éireann. |
Carlow Stables Remains
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| © Eugene Brennan and map courtesy Tailte Éireann |
A fragment of brick from under my front lawn. I can't think of any other way it got there, other than rubble from the demolished stables being bulldozed to act as infill during construction of the Nicholastown housing estate, which opened to residents in 1939. I found it at a depth of over 3 feet when digging a soakaway in 2020.
The Carlow Stables, which was located at what's now the corner of the entrance to the Nicholastown housing estate, acted as a staging station. Fresh horses from the stables were used to replace exhausted ones, on the long-distance Bianconi coach route that ran from Dublin to Cork, via Clonmel.
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| The Carlow Stables were located at what's now the corner of the entrance to the Nicholastown housing estate. Image courtesy Tailte Éireann. |
Thursday, November 27, 2025
Anyone Know Anything About the Hideout Pump?
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| Pump outside Hideout pub. Image courtesy Google Maps. |
Do we know anything about the well under the pump near The Hideout? Imagine if it was made a feature, internally illuminated and with a walk-on, structural glass, see-through cover? (I think they did this with a well that was discovered in the square in Kildare town). How wide or deep is it? Maybe it's just a narrow shaft, but I would have thought these wells were dug by hand in the 19th century and lined with stone or brick. So it would have had to be at least wide enough to use a shovel and pick axe comfortably. The first edition 6" OSI map from c. 1837 doesn't show pumps, but the 25" map from c. 1900 shows them marked with the letter "P" in several locations in the town: One at the Carlow Stables just before the entrance to the Nicholastown housing estate, this one at The Hideout, in Bardon's yard, another one behind Liffey View House on the hill and yet another just before the cottages at Hillside.
Wednesday, November 26, 2025
High Volume Releases at Golden Falls Dam
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| Golden Falls dam, Ballymore Eustace. © Eugene Brennan |
Tuesday, November 25, 2025
Wax Works
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| Waxing a chain. © Eugene Brennan |
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| Double boiler for melting wax safely. © Eugene Brennan |
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| Candles. © Eugene Brennan |
Monday, November 24, 2025
Golden Falls Generator Assembly
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| Golden Falls G 4 assembly. Main shaft guide bearing and oil pump. July 1948. Permission to reproduce image courtesy ESB Archives. © ESB Archives |
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| Golden Falls G4 assembly. General view of main bracket and thrust bearing in position. July 1948. Permission to reproduce image courtesy ESB Archives. © ESB Archives |
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| Golden Falls G 4 assembly. View of turbine without runner. July 1948. Permission to reproduce image courtesy ESB Archives. © ESB Archives |
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| Liffey Power Development 1942 - 1945, frame 15 - Golden Falls Main Set (H S) 10-01-1943. Permission to reproduce image courtesy ESB Archives. © ESB Archives |
Thursday, November 20, 2025
Anyone Got a Good Nose?
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| Image courtesy Google Maps. |
There's a mark on the road surface, extending from one side of the road to the other, where it was re-tarmacked after a service was laid. So that may be where the gas or sewer line runs under the road. The smell is coming from the area where this service enters the business campus, behind the timber fence to the right of the main gate.
My sense of smell has deteriorated because of COVID, so maybe someone could confirm if the can smell anything?
Friday, November 14, 2025
Gas Turbine Engines

Types of gas turbine engines. Created by ChatGPT.
Gas
turbine engines are used in many applications, not just on aircraft.
They power ships, tanks, helicopters and they're also sometimes used in
power stations to drive alternators (AC generators) for generating
electrical power. Gas turbine engines have been used to power trains in
the 50s and 60s, e.g. the Union Pacific GTEL locomotive. A "jet engine"
is a specific type of gas turbine engine where a jet is used to provide
thrust. The jet can provide thrust directly (turbojet) or power a fan
(turbofan engine) or propeller (turboprop). The advantage of a gas
turbine engine is its high efficiency when scaled up and run at high
power. At small scales (if they were used to power cars) they would be
less efficient than a piston engine. Gas turbine engines also have a
high power to weight ratio compared to a piston engine.
Thanks to ChatGPT for drawing a graphic for me.
Nice New Wheels Delivered!
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| Sealed bearing wheels. © Eugene Brennan |
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Sealed bearing image public domain, courtesy 4volvos. |
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| Components of a rear cup and cone bearing. © Eugene Brennan |
Clock Drive Rotor
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| Wall-clock rotor (approximately 8 mm long). © Eugene Brennan |
Technology Tedium
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| AI image generated by Grok. |
Friday, November 07, 2025
Extinct Infrastructure in Kilcullen
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| Image courtesy Google Maps. |
I've always been fascinated by infrastructure and utilities such as electrical and plumbing systems. When we were in senior infants, I remember Richard Brophy, a classmate, and I lifting manhole covers in the yard of the old girls' school, which is now the parish centre. Maybe this was one of our chores to make sure the drains weren't blocked or else we were just curious. In any case, the nuns would have been hidden away in their "hut" at lunch time, unaware of what we were up to. Hosing out the toilet block in the old boys' school, which wasn't much cleaner than a cow shed, would be a weekly chore in years to come. A more pleasant job in 6th class was being sent around all the classrooms to collect the contents of the waste paper baskets and then lighting a huge bonfire against the wall of the briquette shed— all unsupervised, but great fun. I wondered as a child about the object shown in the photos above. In the early 70s, it was a green, cast-iron pipe, sticking out of the ground, possibly with a certain amount of decorative detail. In modern times, infrastructural components such as lamp posts tend to be purely functional, but in the past, they were often ornately designed — for example some of the poles that once carried Dublin's overhead tram wires have now been repurposed as lamp posts. The pipe in the photos was still extant in 2009 and covered in ivy, but disappeared when the boundary wall of CPC was rebuilt. It was presumably a sewage vent, which became unnecessary for a reason I'm unsure of. Vents like this are used in domestic plumbing systems to allow air into sewerage systems to prevent water from being siphoned out of S and P-traps and to allow wastewater to flow freely.
Thursday, November 06, 2025
Megalithic Mound or Natural Glacial Deposit?
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| Image courtesy Google Maps |
I've often wondered about this area of raised ground and whether it's a megalithic feature. The ground rises gently on all sides, but the high ground isn't overly symmetric like other man-made megalithic sites in the landscape. It doesn't appear in any archaeological records. As kids, when we were looking for the legendary tunnel that ran from New Abbey to the Valley Park, I remember investigating a hole in the slope of the mound, lined with stones. Maybe it was the remains of a well? Does anyone remember this?
Erosion and Deposition
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| AI image generated by Grok Imagine. |
The geometry of a conduit through which any fluid passes affects the velocity profile of that fluid. In the case of a river, on
the inside of a bend, water flows slower. On the outside of the bend,
water flows faster. Erosion due to faster flow causing a scouring effect is probably responsible for the so-called
"Sally Hole" in the riverbed near St Brigid's Well. Eventually there may
be landslides as the riverbank is undercut. However, tree roots and
other vegetation act as reinforcement, holding the bank together. So it's
not necessarily imminent. Meanwhile, on the meander opposite
Castlemartin, debris such as bottles and other rubbish accumulate on the
inside bend, where water flows slower. Water also flows faster where
there's a bottleneck in a watercourse. (You can observe this from the
farm trail near the island that's north of the bridge. However, this may
be partially due to a gradient in the river bed).
Bernoulli's
principle is a law in fluid dynamics which states that an increase in
speed occurs simultaneously with a decrease in pressure. It's a
principle that's used in engine carburettors. A venturi (a narrowing of
the passage in a carburettor through which the fuel/air mixture flows)
causes a drop in pressure. That drop in pressure causes fuel to be
sucked into the venturi. Small engines such as those used on lawn mowers
still use this arrangement for supplying the engine with a fuel/air
mixture. However, modern petrol engines on vehicles use fuel injection.
(Since the late 1980s, early 1990s I believe).
Tuesday, November 04, 2025
Slippery Manhole Covers
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| Image courtesy Google Street View |
Edit: I think it's an Eir one, but maybe ESB Networks.
Sunday, November 02, 2025
Pump House, County Board of Health
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| Last edition 6" map. Image courtesy Tailte Éireann. |
Historical OSI maps are available on their "Irish Townland and Historical Map Viewer" website here.
More information here.
Saturday, November 01, 2025
Mill Stream Rerouted
On the last edition map, the area around the mill stream is marked as "liable to floods". Perhaps the meander had a shallow bed and was removed from the stream to improve flow rate, by carrying water through a deeper channel directly to the river to prevent flooding? (The channelcould have been widened also). The original stream bed can be faintly made out in the satellite photo.
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| c. 1837 6" first edition map. Images courtesy Tailte Éireann. |
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| c. 1900 25" map. Image courtesy Tailte Éireann. |
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| Last edition 6" map. Image courtesy Tailte Éireann. |
Friday, October 31, 2025
Install Lighting at the Recycling Facility at Leinster Marts
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| Created with Grok Imagine |
Edit: Grok made the image, so send the Grammar Police to them if you're concerned about spelling.
Wednesday, October 29, 2025
Bad Water Quality In Kilcullen
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| AI image created by Grok for illustrative purposes. |
Maybe it's time to lobby Uisce Éireann again? They say water quality is to recommended standards, but I have my doubts. It may be safe to drink, but it's obviously causing problems. Have there been any changes at the water treatment plant at Srowland, Athy to improve water quality since this article in the Kilcullen Diary in 2022?
































