Lots of good shots.....now if we could get rid of the cheerleader posts in-between.
sorry, I'll put all of them for any yet to come in one on the last day and save some space.
Lots of good shots.....now if we could get rid of the cheerleader posts in-between.
i just HAD to enter,you know me.
i asume the sr 71 counts?
it said on a site about cold war aircraft.
its a full afterburner takeoff at kadena.
https://www.simviation.com/phpupload/upl ... 220500.jpg
Lots of good shots.....now if we could get rid of the cheerleader posts in-between.
could be,they are near the afterburner,maybe a glitch with the effect,or indeed stars.
or they could just be some spots on my monitor.
o,o,o pick me!!! They're called ummmmm. Stars. You know giant balls of fire in space which are [glow=yellow,2,300]commonly mistaken[/glow] to be burning? Just put a layer of cumulus and cirrus to stop the Natural "glitch"
Bear Scare!
CF-18 Hornet, 410 Squadron (Cougars), of CFB Cold Lake, Alberta, Intercepts a Soviet Bear over the Canadian Arctic.
Up untill the mid 90's, the Soviets would frequently send flights of bombers over the arctic to patrol within Canadian airspace to test rection times. Canadian pilots started refering to these scrambles as Bear Scares. Ive witnessed several of these intercept launches while I was an air cadet, attending summer camp at CFB Cold Lake (CYOD). My closest personal experience of the Cold War...
https://www.simviation.com/phpupload/upl ... 320761.jpg
i know but i just wanted to add a small amount of clouds and i didn't notice them at first.
and techinicly they arent balls of fire.
they are balls of hydrogen and helium depending on the age of the star.
and REALY old stars sometimes turn helium into carbon,dont know where i heard that but trust me:i know WAY to much,half of the time i dont even know how i know.
Bear Scare!
CF-18 Hornet, 410 Squadron (Cougars), of CFB Cold Lake, Alberta, Intercepts a Soviet Bear over the Canadian Arctic.
Up untill the mid 90's, the Soviets would frequently send flights of bombers over the arctic to patrol within Canadian airspace to test rection times. Canadian pilots started refering to these scrambles as Bear Scares. Ive witnessed several of these intercept launches while I was an air cadet, attending summer camp at CFB Cold Lake (CYOD). My closest personal experience of the Cold War...
https://www.simviation.com/phpupload/upl ... 320761.jpg
i know but i just wanted to add a small amount of clouds and i didn't notice them at first.
and techinicly they arent balls of fire.
they are balls of hydrogen and helium depending on the age of the star.
and REALY old stars sometimes turn helium into carbon,dont know where i heard that but trust me:i know WAY to much,half of the time i dont even know how i know.
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