Barry M. Goldwater Range

Started by Joe Copalman, October 29, 2010, 06:56:46 PM

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Chris Kennedy

Were those sequential frames, or were there others in between?
Chris Kennedy
Peoria, AZ

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

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Joe Copalman

Sequential @ 6.3 fps. 

I got lucky yesterday and caught four hits with the fireballs shooting out the end of the BDUs.  One of them was another bullseye with the bomb visible in the preceding frame, but it wasn't as obvious as this one.  I really had to look for that one.

Also have a few tiny airplane/big sky shots where you can see the bomb coming off the TER and falling from the aircraft.
"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

Matt Ottosen

Fairchild-Republic A-10C Thunderbolt II
357th Fighter Squadron (357 FS) "Dragons"

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.

Daniel DeSart


Jay Beckman

Didn't realize that -1 was a Dragon and -2 was a Lobo...
Jay Beckman
Chandler, AZ
www.crosswindimages.com
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Joe Copalman

Crews were both from the Lobos though.  On our last visit, there was on A-10 that wore markings from both the Lobos and the Bulldogs. 
"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

Jay Beckman

Oh, ok then...

So it's the 357th FS and the 358th FS which both fall under the 355th FW, right?
Jay Beckman
Chandler, AZ
www.crosswindimages.com
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Joe Copalman

And the 354th (Bulldogs).  Maybe Chris H. or Joel can shed some light on this - do squadrons draw aircraft from a wing "pool," or are airframes just swapped so frequently between squadrons that markings become meaningless?
"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

Joel Hamm

We were one big happy family like 2 years ago all AMU's were disbanded and became an Aircraft Maintenance Squadron (AMXS) with that they took away all identity of squadrons so many of the tails became vanilla tails with no squad markings. That changed so we are now catching up to getting all acft with their proper squad markings. We are back to individual AMU/Fighter Squadrons. Thank goodness.

jslugman

Quote from: Joel Hamm on May 12, 2011, 07:31:35 PM
We were one big happy family like 2 years ago all AMU's were disbanded and became an Aircraft Maintenance Squadron (AMXS) with that they took away all identity of squadrons so many of the tails became vanilla tails with no squad markings. That changed so we are now catching up to getting all acft with their proper squad markings. We are back to individual AMU/Fighter Squadrons. Thank goodness.

SWEET! The AMXS thing is a nightmare when trying to figure out which planes belongs where when the markings are mixed up or non-existent.

Do you know if the EC's are going back to Squadron markings by any chance?
James "JSlugman" O'Rear
Yokota AFB, Japan RJTY

Author of "Aviation Photography- A Pictorial Guide"

Joe Copalman

BEHIND ENEMY LINES

Kahuna 1 arriving at Range 2 for some bomb and low-angle strafe practice.  Autofocus went stupid as I was tracking it and focused on the phone lines in the foreground.  Result was actually kind of cool, so I kept it.
"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

Matt Ottosen

Fairchild-Republic A-10C Thunderbolt II
358th Fighter Squadron (358 FS) "Lobos "

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.

Matt Ottosen

Fairchild-Republic A-10C Thunderbolt II
357th Fighter Squadron (357 FS) "Dragons"

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.

Joe Copalman

#58
357th Hawg off-target after a strafe run at BMGR:


"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

Matt Ottosen

Fairchild-Republic A-10C Thunderbolt II
358th Fighter Squadron (358 FS) "Lobos "

KAHUNA 2 Arriving on Station



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.