Weitere Beispiele werden automatisch zu den Stichwörtern zugeordnet - wir garantieren ihre Korrektheit nicht.
The bridge is of Queen post design, built by an unknown builder.
It has a queen post roof and is thatched.
Queen post trusses were added later in the 19th century as secondary support.
"double roof" with king and queen post trusses; 16.
They would have failed to support the building, so collar beams and queen posts were added to the design in order to help prevent sagging.
The bridge is of queen post truss design.
Early European truss bridges used king post and queen post configurations.
The floors and the queen post truss roof are supported by cast-iron columns.
The nave has a queen post roof.
The roof is Victorian except for the original tie beam and Queen post frame in the back wall.
The queen post truss bridge is 12'4" wide and 55'6" long.
An alternative truss construction used a pair of cross beams between the queen posts, forming an "X".
In roof construction such as king post, queen post, crown post framing.
For example, in Game 6, Kasparov was two pawns down, but found the marvelous queen post at f5.
It is a two story, heavy timber frame structure with queen post and purlin roof framing.
The bridge construction is a combination of Queen post and King post type truss.
An alternative truss construction uses two queen posts (or queen-posts).
A development adds a collar beam above the queen posts, which are then termed queen struts.
A section of the tie beam between the queen posts may be removed to create a hammerbeam roof.
In the attic the open rafters allow a view of the craftsmanship involved in the queen post framing; it has been left unfinished.
Four queen posts surround the area under the skylight in the middle of an L-shaped set of servants' quarters on the north and east.
The nave has mediaeval queen post and wind brace roof, which is supported by two responds and a central pier.
As with a king post, the queen posts may be replaced with iron rods and thus called a queen rod truss.
A queen post is a tension member in a truss designed to span longer openings than a king post truss.
A king post uses one central supporting post, whereas the queen post truss uses two.