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SHOWCASE PHOTO: The Lockeed F-22A Raptor. The symbol of modern Air Power for the United States and the US Air Force. The most technological fighter currently in service, a cutting edge of aviation innovation and design.  The Raptor, which still has some features on the plane that are deemed classified by the US Government, is a favorite at Airshow all over ther United States.  Performing manuvers and displays unlike any other aircraft, the Raptor stops everyone in their tracks and makes them look skyward as they see this amazing aircraft ‘flip’ a 360 almost in place. Thanks tot he directional thrust vectoring on the Raptor, it can perform banks and rolls that other aircraft could only dream about.  The Raptor is designed with the latest stealth technology able to fool radars with it’s very sleek and radar absorbent shape.  Home to a squadron of F-22 Raptors and also a major training facility for Raptor pilots around the nation, Nellis Air Force Base on the outskirts of Las Vegas, Nevada (also known as ‘Fighter Town’) the Raptor is a yearly participant in the base’s open house Airshow in November.  It was on the evening of the last day of the 2010 Nellis Air Force Base Airshow (called ‘Aviation Nation’ by fans) that a special sunset photo (ABOVE) presented itself to me during the last few minutes of light in a shot that is probably my most favorite Raptor shot yet and also one of those ‘luck’ shots that came and went in an instant. Whenever the Raptor rolls out to the end of the runway, you can look down the Airshow fence line and see every photographer’s camera raise up into position ready to catch it.  I can’t think of too many people who don’t get excited when the Raptor demo is about to take to the skies.  Naturally, the Raptor is one of the heaviest photographed aircraft (I’d say) at Airshows in America when it appears. In previous years at Nellis, I knew that this Hot Ramp area would be a prime location at the very end of the show after most of the crowds had left and gone home to catch the beautiful sunset ‘liquid light’ as it painted the reflective skins of the aircraft parked there because the sun would set just behind and to the right of the hot ramp (see photo to right).  Now, how the showcase photo up top came to happen… On the last day of an airshow often times performers will want to head home, especially since all civilian performers are not based at military base airshows.  They’ll fly out as soon as the show ends and the runways are cleared for departures.  For a photographer, this is a great chance to hang around and photograph many of the aircraft that didn’t fly or were on static display as they head home. This also means catching them during the sunset light giving them that golden light color that most photographers crave.  Unfortunately, though, for those who stayed after at the Nellis show on the second day, most of the aircraft were staying overnight and going home the next morning or had already left for home after their demos. Only a handful of aerobatic performers decided to leave right at the end of the show.  As soon as the show ended, I hung around the Hot Ramp area taking photos of the static aircraft that were in the area waiting for the sun to lower just a little bit more to cause that vivid orange light to paint on the various Raptors, Hornets, Phantoms, and other aircraft parked out there on the ramp.  A few performers were lined up to take off, mostly biplane aerobatics, just off to the side of the Hot Ramp on the taxi way.  Finally, the sun had fallen enough for me to start to get the glow I wanted, and it was a spectacular sunset for it! Waiting had paid off once again, but I was about to have a chance to photography the Raptor in a way that’s unique and rare which would make the wait no question of being worth it. As I was shooting the aircraft on the ramp with the liquid light on them, one of the last aerobatic performers to leave decided to give a nice little goodbye present to everyone still in the area and as he taxied into position for take off next to the Hot Ramp, he turned on his airshow smoke system sending the otherwise aviation photographer’s nightmere smoke into the beautiful sunset sky.  I realized this right away, and noticed that the slight breeze was pushing the smoke towards the hot ramp, right behind the aircraft.  At first I was annoyed realizing that in a matter of seconds my previous few minutes I had while the sunset was perfect and the light golden would be hazed by this ugly smoke and the shots ruined.  Not to mention by the time the smoke would clear, the sun would have gone behind the distant mountains, and the golden light gone.  Snapping the most crucial shots I wanted as fast as I could as the smoke traveled closer to the first Raptor, I began to get upset that my waiting had been ruined. And just as fast as the shot appeared, it vanished. The smoke was there, but now it returned to looking like just a residual haze and smog more than a dramatic opening shot to the next Top Gun (Air Force version) movie.  I was beyond happy and excited to see I’d gotten the one photo I saw with my eyes, and it’s for sure one of my favorite all time Raptor shots, one I plan to make a large print of and hang on the wall for the luck shot I almost missed. For more in this series, click here!Leave a Reply
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