ÔÎÒÎÊÍÈÃÀ

Êíèãè ïî ôîòîãðàôèè è ôîòîàëüáîìû. Ïðîôåññèîíàëàì è ëþáèòåëÿì






Ôîòîãðàôèÿ: ëèòåðàòóðà êíèãè ó÷åáíèêè ïîñîáèÿ
ñïðàâî÷íèêè ïî ôîòîãðàôèè / öèôðîâàÿ ôîòîãðàôèÿ /
ïðîôåññèîíàëüíàÿ ôîòîãðàôèÿ /
ëþáèòåëüñêàÿ ôîòîãðàôèÿ / ïîäàðî÷íûå ôîòîàëüáîìû /
ñòàðûå è ñòàðèííûå ôîòîãðàôèè





Brian Grams, Andrew Gold

GM Intercity Coaches 1944-1980 Photo Archive


   
Iconografix, 2003
Ñòðàíèö: 128
Ôîðìàò: 260x220
In 1943 Yellow Truck & Coach Manufacturing Co. became a division of General Motors and was renamed GM Truck & Coach Division. The first GM badged buses were built when the War Production Board (WPB) authorized production of 1,340 transit buses. The first highway GMs were built in 1944 when 700 parlor cars were allowed by the WPB. Between August 1923 and May 1987 approximately 128,000 buses were built by Yellow/GM with another 12,000 built in Canada by GM Diesel, Ltd. All the buses shown in this book were built in Pontiac, Michigan including those for delivery in Canada.
Êàòåãîðèè êàòàëîãà:
Òðàíñïîðò. Òåõíèêà









Ôîòîêàëåéäîñêîï
Sony - Sony t300
è€í×å´_ÊŒ×4å‹•5Tê•Ç¬@€27.02.09 - .Xþ­T°í×å´_ÊŒ×4å‹•5Tê•Ç¬ÖÌ{Ø-ÕýŠ°í×å´U² Ÿ¼5000õ×4L•;÷þG…ÀŒÖŠRþUáéD„¼°2N€V™3pX©N€ÃONYŠRþT°í×å´_¼õ”§Px.å¬Ø5000­è000õ؉—T§Pê¼ 6•˜ÏŠWUƬ°í×å´Tìé•ê’€*¬’€Wf0_¼°èb008)­ Uqy©è€í×å´W4ëÖìèس¬­öUqyPéXahâïÔjŒ`9)f„°í×å´V`We×l/p>


Sony - Sony t200
F$-×RDC ØnT200³è•²12.01.09 - IT168 ØnDC-T200ŠžèŸ¼æÔ>kXc24 €aŸ± GUý¬×ordro¬YU² –X÷”6õâ009)4L€FK퀀5Æ×!Ø–>Õ¿DC-T200p–èÔÊê•›ë×}¬„200÷×ØSony CCD 1000èÕ [gUã]ØnFq蕲DC-T303—`ì÷


> info@bibliophoto.ru <

Rambler's Top100
ÊèáåðÃîðîä.Ru - êàòàëîã ñàéòîâ.