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Blue Angels Two By Two

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Afterwork: Border, sharpened, contrast

2007 Indianapolis Air Show, Mt. Comfort, Indiana


The United States Navy's Navy Flight Demonstration Squadron, popularly known as the Blue Angels, was formed in 1946 and is the world's first officially sanctioned military aerial demonstration team.

The Blue Angels first flew three aircraft in formation, then four, and currently operate six aircraft per show. A seventh aircraft is for backup, in the event of mechanical problems with one of the other aircraft, and for giving public relations "demonstration flights" to civilians, usually selected from a press pool.

This aerobatic team is split into "the Diamond" (Blue Angels 1 through 4) and the Opposing Solos (Blue Angels 5 and 6). Most of their displays alternate between maneuvers performed by the Diamond and those performed by the Solos. The Diamond, in tight formation and usually at lower speeds, performs maneuvers such as formation loops, barrel rolls, or transitions from one formation to another.

The Opposing Solos usually perform maneuvers just under the speed of sound which showcase the capabilities of their individual F/A-18 Hornets through the execution of high-speed passes, slow passes, fast rolls, slow rolls, and very tight turns. Some of the maneuvers include both solo F/A-18s performing at once, such as opposing passes (toward each other in what appears to be a collision course, narrowly missing one another) and mirror formations (back-to-back. belly-to-belly, or wingtip-to-wingtip, with one jet flying inverted).

At the end of the routine, all six aircraft join in the Delta formation. After a series of flat passes, turns, loops, and rolls performed in this formation, they execute the team's signature "fleur-de-lis" closing maneuver.

The parameters of each show must be tailored to local visibility: In clear weather the "high" show is performed, in overcast conditions it's the "low" show that the spectators see, and in limited visibility (weather permitting) the "flat" show is presented. The "high" show requires an 8,000-foot ceiling and visibility of 3 nautical miles from the show's centerpoint. "Low" and "flat" ceilings are 3,500 and 1,500 feet respectively.

:peace:
`lns
Image size
1102x769px 491.79 KB
Make
Canon
Model
Canon EOS DIGITAL REBEL XT
Shutter Speed
1/2000 second
Aperture
F/7.1
Focal Length
300 mm
ISO Speed
400
Date Taken
Aug 25, 2007, 4:30:08 PM
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Comments22
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kiwickle's avatar
I saw the Blue Angels back on May 15. it turned out, the buses left before they got off, and while I was in the second bus, they kept making passes above us. finally, while leaving the parking lot of FedEx field, my friend got a superzoom shot with his camera of the whole six plane formation. (It was at an airshow in Maryland.)