Air-to-Air photography

Published on: July 30, 2007 at 10:22 PM

Unaย versione inย italiano di quanto descritto in questo postย puรฒ essere letta sul forumย “Italian Vipers”ย cliccando qui.

Many aircraft enthusiasts and photographers have noticed that the majority of the air-to-airย pictures I took depict the subject fromย abeam or astern:ย most of them were shot from behind looking ahead,ย while just a few are 3/4 frontal (thus taken looking in the circular area behind the airplane, from 4 to 8 o’clock).
This is the explaination:

1) If you fly as a passanger in a military aircraft you always sitย in a position above (or very next to) the wing and so it is quite probable thatย the wing or part of itย will interfere with your picture. At the beginning, I took a lot of pictures looking to the subject flying behind my aircraft butย I noticed that most of times the wing orย the tip tanks appeared in my picturesย and I consequently decidedย toย  turn myย cameraย “ahead”, in a zone where I could better manage my shots. Furthermore,ย whenย you are working withย an aircraftย in closeย  formationย youย will experience verticalย movements of the subject that willย affect your shots.ย Formation flying isย made of small but continuos movements that will prevent you from taking aย picture ofย theย other aircraftย in the position you imagined. Your subject could be partially covered orย blurry. Thisย sort of “dance”ย is particularly intenseย when flying low level because of the turbolence. One of my first flights was with the AMX of the 13th Gruppo. “Mission 400A” was the callsign of a low level training missionย starting and ending from Amendola. I took many pictures ofย the other Ghiblisย as they rejoined the formation after take off but when I developed my films (at that time I didn’t use digital camerasย yet)ย I discovered that many of my slides had the other AMXs covered by our wingtip’ Sidewinder launch rails.


2) There’s not so much room inside a jet cockpit. It’s easier pointing your camera and medium sized lens ahead than towards tail while wearing a cumbering flight helmet and a Secumar lifejacket.

3) Since space is limited, moving and turning your head it’s very difficult.ย Because you’r not familiar with that environment you have to be careful, in order to prevent any of your items from interfering with the flight controls. Seat harnesses can be slightly released but turning your body towards the tail is something difficult to deal with. I’m also 1,84 mt tall and I don’t wag easilyย within the cockpit.

ย 4)ย Under a physical point of view, photographing ahead isย a lot lessย difficult. Even if I’m notย affected by travel sickness in normal conditions, I have experiencedย nausea andย allย others symptoms linked to the kinetosis during my flights with military aircraft (even if I have never had the need to vomit). Flying as a passenger in an unstable aircraft, duringย ย acrobatic maneuvers, with the head alwaysย turned laterally and with a closed eye, is really demanding. A pilot, the former Commander of the 212th Gruppo at Lecce, once recalled to have experienced the same symptoms when flying as backseater with a camera! Anyway, all those symptoms intensify if you look towardsย the 6 o’clock (especially if you are not a military pilot used to G forces) and you seriously risk to waste your sortie if you are sick and can’t take pictures. In any case, the more you fly the more you get used to it.ย One day I flew a “tough” mission in an MB-339CD: aย 2 vs 2 MIR with a simulated dogfight. At the end of the mission I had a strongย sickness but the following day I flew an acrobatic mission without problems and I took a lot of “back photograph” of the other MB-339 flying as our wingman. There are also aircraft that are so stable that it seems to you that you are travelling in a train: the F-104 was one of them.


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ย 5) Usually, the photographer flies in a chase plane.ย  The chase can move almost freely to get the photograph at the passenger’s need.ย The aircraft flying as a leader has to move much more carefullyย in order to prevent the wingman fromย getting inย a dangerous position or assuming a dangerous attitude. If you stay behind, you can move as you want to get picture like those published in this post or in this page: F-104 tribute.




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David Cenciotti is a journalist based in Rome, Italy. He is the Founder and Editor of โ€œThe Aviationistโ€, one of the worldโ€™s most famous and read military aviation blogs. Since 1996, he has written for major worldwide magazines, including Air Forces Monthly, Combat Aircraft, and many others, covering aviation, defense, war, industry, intelligence, crime and cyberwar. He has reported from the U.S., Europe, Australia and Syria, and flown several combat planes with different air forces. He is a former 2nd Lt. of the Italian Air Force, a private pilot and a graduate in Computer Engineering. He has written five books and contributed to many more ones.
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