North American T-28 - T-6 Texan / SNJ / Harvard

Started by Bubak, July 06, 2009, 05:29:42 PM

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Scott Youmans

Taken back in February 2011 on the way to Coolidge.  70-200mm f/4L IS on EOS-1D Mark IV.
Scott C. Youmans
www.scyphoto.com
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Joe Copalman

"I'm sorry sir, you can't take photos of that aircraft."

"If you've seen my work, you'd know I really can't take photos of any aircraft." 

Joe Copalman
AzAP Co-Founder
Mesa, AZ

Scott Youmans

Thanks Joe!  I'll be posting some other shots from that day on the Coolidge pages.
Scott C. Youmans
www.scyphoto.com
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Jay Beckman

Jay Beckman
Chandler, AZ
www.crosswindimages.com
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Scott Youmans

Taken 9 years ago as of tomorrow (11/10/2002).  Scanned transparency.
Scott C. Youmans
www.scyphoto.com
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Matt Ottosen

North American AT-6B-NT Texan

Recovering to Falcon Field after an air-to-air photo shoot during Air2AirWorkshops' last workshop of the year.

Matt "Linus" Ottosen
Ottosen Photography
Phoenix, AZ

The Legend of the Guardian of the Line
The Greek God "Linus" comes from the Greek name Λινος (Linos) meaning "leg."
In Greek legend, he was the son of the God Apollo who was accidentally killed when he stepped over the white line.

All images © Matt Ottosen | Ottosen Photography, all rights reserved.

Scott Youmans

Scott C. Youmans
www.scyphoto.com
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Scott Youmans

Clean T-28C at Gateway 3/6/2010.
Scott C. Youmans
www.scyphoto.com
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Chris Kennedy

Normally when the warbirds return to DVT, they use a "Whiskey 1" arrival. That is a Navy carrier style approach when they fly over the runway and do a break to a downwind leg for landing. The tower controller will normally tell them to approach at 3000 feet (1500 agl) and will tell them to "break over the numbers" or "break over mid-field" in order to fit them into the traffic flow. When this guy arrived, there was no traffic whatsoever and the controller said "altitude and break at pilot's discretion," so he came in at about 200 feet agl and didn't do his break until the far end of the runway.

Chris Kennedy
Peoria, AZ

http://www.flickr.com/photos/chrisk48/

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phantomphan1974

Damon Duran
Co: Founder: Aviation Photographers of Southern California www.ApSoCal.com
Orange County Sheriff PSR-Air Support Unit Photographer


Scott Youmans

Scott C. Youmans
www.scyphoto.com
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Chris Kennedy

By strange coincidence I just today saw an NTSB probable cause report on that AT-6, N76BZ, for a landing accident at Falcon two years ago. There was a reference to it on one of the RSS feeds that I follow. The report actually came out a long time ago.

http://www.ntsb.gov/aviationquery/brief.aspx?ev_id=20100221X20856&key=1
Chris Kennedy
Peoria, AZ

http://www.flickr.com/photos/chrisk48/

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Jay Beckman

Jay Beckman
Chandler, AZ
www.crosswindimages.com
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Jeff D. Welker

#103
Quote from: Jay Beckman on February 13, 2012, 05:29:18 PM
Maybe 500mm was too much lens?  ;D

I'm not sure about excessive focal length; however, what I really want to know is how you got the wing tip and fuselage in sharp focus while shooting a slow shutter speed on your 500 and panning??? You make a guy with shaky hands very jealous  ;D
Jeff D. Welker
www.jeffdwelker.com
Mesa, AZ

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Jay Beckman

#104
Essentially, everything on a line from the position light, to Popeye to the Pilot are all on the same relative plane and all moving at more or less the same speed.

Perpendicular like this is the one place you won't see much parallax error.

Same day, same flight of T-6s / SNJs going out at AirVenture but this one was on the far side of the runway while the one above was on the near side.
Notice that the Oshkosh trucks in the background are just a little bit more pronounced here than above.  Less subject to background distance.  Not much, but enough to affect the DOF.
Jay Beckman
Chandler, AZ
www.crosswindimages.com
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