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D-BASE is a Dassault Falcon-2000EX of ThyssenKrupp (and not a database), as seen here on 5 may 2010 at Düsseldorf. © Bert Visser

Q-Base 2014 - Creatures of the Night

Weeze Airport, Germany

13.09.2014

 

Client: Q-Dance

© 2013 www.sunny4ya.com

 

Don`t forget to follow me on Facebook !

Working on custom liveries, but had to go through the initial process of making the whole thing digitally

Based on an 100S, this was Austin Healey's attempt at a streamlined land speed record car. In 1954, hoping to break 200 mph, Donald Healey got the car up to 192.62 mph at Bonneville in 1954.

Vasco conquista o Campeonato Carioca da categoria infantil.

Fluminense 1x2 Vasco - Laranjeiras

05/11/2011

Foto: Raquel Vieira/Vasco.com.br

Mirim derrota o Fluminense e conquista o título Carioca de Futsal. 17/07/2011

Fotos: Raquel Vieira/vasco.com.br

Photo by Rick Wood/NW Guardian

 

Phlebotomist Frank Wake inserts a needle into the arm of Pfc. Theresea Painter during a blood drive at the Presidio of Monterey in California.

 

Located in the heart of the Pacific Northwest's Puget Sound region, Joint Base Lewis-McChord (JBLM) is the Defense Department's premiere military installation on the West Coast.

Joint Base Lewis-McChord (JBLM) provides world-class installation support to the joint base warfighters, Family members and the surrounding community.

For more information about Joint Base Lewis-McChord, visit the Facebook page at www.facebook.com/JBLMGarrison or read the article at www.nwguardian.com.

This tree is found on the path up to Badby Woods. It reminds me of the tree that swallows up the hobbits in Lord of the Rings.

 

[DSC_4146]

On trail to see the top of the world.

A big cluster of mushrooms (possibly pholiota adiposa) in Kelvingrove Park, Glasgow.

Base of a column on a bridge over the Vltava.

Turning base to final, runway 36, in a Cessna 172, Waterbury-Oxford Airport (KOXC), returning from Hudson River Exclusion flight, October 14, 2013.

 

Flat version (anaglyph also available in my Anaglyphs set).

Tennessee Association of Vintage Base Ball - May 5, 2013

desenho impresso em serigrafia.

A3. 3 cores.

 

disponível na loja da +Soma

e na Loja Cachalote.

www.lojacachalote.com

I want to do a Van Gogh "Starry Night" cupcake cake for my birthday this year, but since it looks mega complicated I thought I'd do a practice run and take it in to work as an early birthday cake.

 

I tried to figure out the base colours of each of the cupcakes so then I could layer from there.

 

(Inspired by a much better version of Van Gogh cupcakes: )

Expedition Health features Biology Base Camp, a real working lab where families can put on lab coats, goggles, and gloves and conduct experiments together. They can discover the amount of sugar in breakfast cereals, extract DNA, and look at their own cells under a microscope, and more. © Scott Dressel-Martin

Base XXXV:3 (1915) (Päiväläisen puisto, Reimarlia, Helsinki, Finland)

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I've driven up and down the Desert Road countless times, and this never happens...

Another Euro base-spec we don't get in the UK.

An 53rd Wing F-15 Eagle flies over another of the wing’s aircraft, the B-52 Stratofortress Aug. 1 at Eglin Air Force Base, Fla. 49th Test and Evaluation Squadron aircrew brought the bomber from Barksdale AFB, La., to allow wing personnel an opportunity to see one of their geographically separated aircraft up close. (U.S. Air Force photo/Samuel King Jr.)

images of the chicken coop build

+++ DISCLAIMER +++

Nothing you see here is real, even though the model, the conversion or the presented background story might be based on historical facts. BEWARE!

  

Some background:

First opportunity for the Finnish Air Force to have a look at a MiG-15 happened on 25th January 1954, when a Soviet Air Force aircraft crashed into a forest at Rautjärvi, close to the Soviet border. The surviving pilot said later that he had lost orientation and when fuel was running out, he ejected. The wreck was quickly evaluated before a Soviet rescue troop arrived to dismantle the plane and return it to the Soviet Union. This happened after quick political negotiations to exchange it for 62 Finnish citizens arrested in the Soviet Union.

 

Maintaining a non-aligned status and being positioned geographically between the NATO nations and the USSR, Finland purchased military equipment from the East and the West alike. A second opportunity was during May 1954 when, in trade negotiations between Finland and the Soviet Union in Moscow, six MiG-15s were offered as part of the bilateral trade deal. A Finnish pilot was sent to make evaluation of the type. After flying a MiG-15UTI and evaluation of the fighter variant, it was found to be technically obsolete and unsuitable for the Finnish Air Force. The MiG-15UTI was also compared with the dh Vampire Trainer, which instead was selected as the first Finnish jet trainer during 1955.

The next time the MiG was on table was during 1956, when a new jet fighter type was being considered. This time the Soviet alternatives were the MiG-15bis or MiG-17. This time the Folland Gnat Mk 1 was selected. It took four years before the MiG-15 was offered again, as a trainer for MiG-19s the Soviets were trying to sell to Finland. This offer was again rejected, as the MiG-19S was found to be obsolete from both weapons and performance points of view. Following this dead end the study of western fighters, Mirage IIIC and Saab 35 Draken, was started. In this situation the Soviets changed their offer from the MiG-19 to the MiG-21F-13. As the purchase was possible to be paid with trade exchange and the MiG's performance was comparable with the Western types, the MiG was selected. Four MiG-15UTI trainer aircraft were added to the purchase as conversion trainers for the fighters - the reason was that the MiG-21 had no immediately available trainer version (the MiG-21U Mongol-A was just entering production in 1962). Agreement with the USSR was signed on 1st February 1962. Before delivery, a group of Finnish pilots and mechanics were trained in the Soviet Union in the latter half of 1962. The MiG-15UTI trainers were flown to Karelia Wing's Rissala base near Kuopio by Soviet pilots during November 1962. These planes were manufactured by Avia in Czechoslovakia and, according to manufacturing plates, these late production examples were type Avia CS-102.

 

Lauri Pekuri became the first Finnish pilot to fly the UTI-MiG-15 during a visit to Moscow as part of a military delegation. On 10th November 1962 the 31st Fighter Squadron (HävLv 31 Hävittäjä Lentolaivue, fighter squadron) at Kuopio-Rissala AB, which was part of the Karelian Air Wing (Karjalan Lennosto), took delivery of four Czechoslovak-built UTI-MiG-15s (Aero CS-102s). The aircraft, which were ferried amid great secrecy by Soviet pilots, were in the latest configuration, featuring the Afanasyev A-12.7 machine-gun, Bariy-M IFF and OSP-48 ILS. Interestingly, the trainers were diverted from the Soviet order but were nevertheless new aircraft, not second-hand machines.

 

The trainers received the tactical codes MU-1 (c/n 922221), MU-2 (c/n 822028), MU-3 (c/n 922226) and MU-4 (c/n 722375; sometimes reported in error as 722479); the MU serial prefix and the trainer's squat, tubby appearance promptly gave rise to the nickname 'Mukula' ('chubby' in Finnish). The aircraft were flown in natural metal finish. Each pilot converting to the MiG-21F-13 was given 14 flights (eight hours) in the UTI-MiG-15 before progressing to the fighter. The Midgets were also used for proficiency training. Additionally, the Air Force Flight Test Centre (Koelentuelentolaivue) at Halli AB undertook a short performance test program and used the Midgets for development work - for example, as radar targets for the Finnish Air Force's SAAB J-35S Draken fighters.

 

In 1968-69 the trainers underwent a major overhaul in the Soviet Union, but all other maintenance was done locally. MU-3 crashed on 27th November 1970 after running out of fuel, but the crew ejected safely. To fill the gap a fifth UTI-MiG-15 was procured, this time directly from Czechoslovakia. Since production had already ended it was a second-hand machine, a revamped Aero CS-102s (c/n 822210), a former ejection seat testbed with low flying hours, formerly operated by the Výzkumný a zkušební letecký ústav (VZLÚ, 'Czech Aerospace Research Centre') for the development of an indigenous ejection seat.

The revamped aircraft arrived in Rissala in early 1971 and received the new tactical code MU-5. This aircraft was insofar noteworthy as it became the only Finnish UTI-MiG-15 that carried camouflage. The scheme had already been applied in Czechoslovakia after a briefing from the Finnish Air Force, but the aircraft was delivered without tactical markings for the transfer flight. However, the requested paint scheme, an experimental camouflage reminiscent of the Finnish WWII scheme in green and black with grey undersides and "clouds" on the flanks that extended into the upper scheme, was executed with local paints, and following Warsaw Pact painting standards. As a result, the scheme was truthfully replicated, but the paints on the upper surfaces turned out to be rather dark. However, MU-5 was accepted with this unique livery and received large Ilmavoimat roundels in six positions (with the fuselage roundels close to the air intake), the tactical code on the flanks behind the wings, and the squadron badge (a leaping black lynx on a white cloud as background) on the fin, just below the stabilizers. Additionally, the aircraft’s callsign “Adam” was painted as a nickname and reminder for the trainees under the front cockpit opening. MU-5 retained its unique camouflage through later overhauls, even though refreshed with domestic paints that changed the upper tones into a lighter hue, and the tactical markings were changed over time, too. In the mid-Seventies the fuselage roundel on all Finnish Midgets was moved to the rear fuselage, the tactical code remained there but was reduced in size, and the lynx emblem was now painted behind the air intake, together with a single large number corresponding to the individual aircraft code.

 

The remaining three CS-102 veterans were kept in service until the small fleet was superseded by five MiG-21UM Mongol-Bs in 1978. These were, as an anecdotal note, delivered from the USSR in a dark camouflage very similar to MU-5 a couple of years earlier, due to the use of local paints and a rather free interpretation of the Finnish Air Force's paint scheme request! But with the arrival of the Mongols the Finnish UTI-MiG-15s’ career soon ended. MU-1 was struck off charge on 20th April 1979 and is preserved today at the Hallinportti museum just outside Halli AB. MU-2, which made its first flight in Finland on 12th January 1963 at the hands of Lt (SG) Veikko Tähtinen, was struck off charge on 30th May 1979 and is preserved at Vesivehmaa. MU-4 made its last flight from Rissala AB on 7th February 1977, piloted by Capt. Ari Piippo; it was struck off charge on 12th April 1979 and is now on display at the Central Finnish Aviation Museum (Keski-Suomen Ilmailumuseo) at Luonetjärvi airfield, Tikkakoski. MU-5, finally, was already lost on 15th of November 1977 in a ground fire that could be traced back to an oil leak in the engine section. The aircraft burned down beyond repair; since the airframe was even too damaged to become a museum exhibit it was eventually scrapped in 1979.

  

General characteristics:

Crew: 2

Length: 10.04 m (32 ft 10½ in) overall

8,02 m (26 ft 3¼ in) hull only

Wingspan: 10.08 m (33 ft 1 in)

Height: 3.7 m (12 ft 2 in)

Wing area: 20.6 m² (222 sq ft)

Airfoil: root: TsAGI S-10; tip: TsAGI SR-3

Empty weight: 3.382 kg (7,450 lb)

Gross weight: 4,806 kg (10,585 lb)

Max takeoff weight: 5.260 kg (15,585 lb)

Fuel capacity: 1,420 L (380 US gal; 310 imp gal) internal

 

Powerplant

1× Motorlet/Walter M05 centrifugal-flow turbojet, with 26.5 kN (5,955 lbf) maximum thrust

 

Performance:

Maximum speed: 1,050 km/h (669 mph, 581 kn) / Mach 0.87 at sea level

1,031 km/h (640 mph; 560 kn) / Mach 0.9 at 5,000 m (16,377 ft)

Cruise speed: 850 km/h (530 mph, 460 kn) / Mach 0.69

Ferry range: 2,520 km (1,570 mi, 1,360 nmi) at 12,000 m (39,370 ft)

with 2x600 L (160 US gal; 130 imp gal) drop-tanks

Service ceiling: 15,200 m (49,800 ft)

Rate of climb: 42 m/s (8,255 ft/min)

Wing loading: 255 kg/m² (60.7 lb/sq ft) at MTOW

Thrust/weight: 0.54

 

Armament:

1× 12,7 mm (0.5”) Afanasyev A-12,7 machine gun with 150 rounds

2× underwing hardpoints, usually occupied with drop tanks

 

The kit and its assembly:

A very simple what-if aircraft model, and it was simply inspired by the question how a camouflaged Finnish UTI-MiG-15 trainer might have looked like? In real life the four aircraft were left in bare metal, only protected with clear lacquer containing aluminum powder, and relatively large markings. When I read about the aircrafts’ history in Finland I came across MU-3’s “sudden death” (most things mentioned in the background are real, just MU-5 and anything concerning this aircraft is fictional) and envisioned a fictional replacement in the early Seventies that would bear camouflage.

 

The Midget kit is one of the more complex Hobby Boss kits (read: more than just a fuselage plus wings and some bits to stick onto this base) like the company’s F9F or Hawker Seahawk, and for its price point the kit is IMHO pretty good and crisp. It’s still quite simple, but it features many small detail parts to be added on the airframe that yield a convincing model, including a surprisingly well detailed cockpit tub (even though it lacks a rear bulkhead and there’s an ugly gap behind the front seat), a nice landing gear and two different pairs of underwing tanks.

The only upgrades I made: the single-piece canopy was cut into four parts (with a very narrow frame between the cockpits, ugh!) for open display, and a wire antenna (heated black sprue material) was spanned between the fin tip under the dielectric fairing and its attachment point right in front of the free-standing antenna mast on the right fuselage flank, next to the cockpit.

Getting the model on its three wheels was not easy – there’s not much space in the nose, because the air intakes are fully detailed (yet feature ugly and well visible locator pins which should be sanded away) and the splitter insert also contains the front landing gear well – there’s only little space above it, and the lead beads I cramped into the area were just enough to make the model stand “upright”, even though only once the main wheels had been mounted and the separate canopies put into place! Phew!

  

Painting and markings:

MU-5’s paint scheme took inspiration from two sources: one is the “Hawk” scheme from the late Seventies, which was devised for the Bae Hawk trainers but already introduced with the MiG-21bis and the respective trainers that arrived 2 years earlier.

The pattern was lent from the Hawk, since it has comparable outlines with the Hawk, but the colors were rather inspired by the initial MiG-21U trainers that were directly delivered from the USSR, already painted with Soviet paints that differed markedly from what Finnish-painted aircraft with domestic paints would look like. The Mongols were delivered in a deep but reddish brown, the green was very dark, too, with little contrast and a bluish hue. And the undersides were painted in a deep turquoise blue. For an unusual look I used a mix of Humbrol 10 and 66 for the deep but dull brown, Modelmaster FS 34096 for the green, and the undersides were painted with a pale blue (ModelMaster Russian Flanker Underside Blue).

 

The cockpit tub’s side walls were painted in the dreaded Soviet anti-fatigue teal, with medium grey lower areas, and aluminums seats with brown cushions. The landing gear and the respective wells were painted in a greyish silver tone, with bright green wheel discs as contrast. A similarly bright green antenna fairing was added to the fin tip, and the tail rudders’ counterweights became yellow (a practice that was actually introduced on the late NMF Finnish UTI-MiG-15s).

As a contrast and a reminder of the Finnish UTI-MiG-15’s original/real livery I painted the slipper tanks to resemble natural metal finish.

 

The roundels came from a Finnish Gnat (Special Hobby), the HävLv 31’s Lynx emblems from a Matchbox MiG-21 kit. The tactical codes were created from single black 6 mm letters (TL Modellbau); the few other stencils were puzzled together from the scrap box. To add some color contrast, I also decided to mark the area above the flaps with 1 mm red decal strips (also generic stuff from TL Modellbau), and the wing walkways were created with 4 mm black decal strip stuff. Some dry-brushing with silver was done on the wings’ leading edges and around the cockpit for light weathering effect and to make the model look less “clean”. And finally, the model was sealed with matte acrylic varnish.

  

A very simple project, and a “quick” submission for a Group Build at whatifmodellers.com, following a spontaneous inspiration. The camouflage suits the tubby Midget well, though, it looks very believable, and the beauty shots also confirm the paint scheme’s effectiveness over the typical Finnish forested landscape.

Joint Base Elmendorf-Richardson personnel and families celebrate the Air Force during the 2018 “Illuminating Alaskan Skies: The Aurora Ball,” at the Egan Center in Anchorage, Alaska, Sept. 8, 2018. This event marked the Air Force’s upcoming 71st birthday and celebrated the Air Force’s heritage through reflection, ceremony and camaraderie. (U.S. Air Force photo by Airman 1st Class Crystal A. Jenkins)

Lowry Air Force Base went into operation just before WWII got going and served as a training center until 1994 when the base was closed.

 

In one of the Nation's most successful transformations of a former military base, Lowry is now a nice neighborhood.

 

Many base buildings were saved and repurposed including two larger hangers. One has become part Shopping Mall, part U-store-it. The other hanger is home to Wings Over The Rockies.

 

This is one of the B-1 prototypes. The airframe on this bird was twisted in testing. That is part of how it ended up here.

 

The Museum rents the space for all sorts of events. I once mixed a national Gospel act in the space. My mixing console sat right next to the front landing gear, under the nose of the plane.

Stripped down to its basic components at Abingdon in September 1990 for eventual assignment to the RAF BBMF.

 

This aircraft was a combat veteran and also flew operationally on D-Day in June 1944. Very sadly, this aircraft crashed near its base at Coningsby on 25 May 2024. The pilot lost his life in the accident. I believe this is the first aircrew fatality in the long history of the BBMF.

“4me4you” visits Magda Danysz Gallery, London, which paid tribute to the artist “Rammellzee”.

Rammellzee was a visual artist, graffiti writer, performance artist, hip hop musician, art theoretician, and sculptor from New York City. His work is based on the theory of Gothic Futurism.

His music is marked with the artist’s experimental approach and represents a mixture of metal and rap with futuristic and apocalyptic elements.

 

Art from Futura, Doze Green, Delta, Ian Kuali’i, Augustine Kofie, sheOne, Poesia, Dr Zulu, Will Barras, Dan Lish and more. Remixes from Divine Styler, Edan, Mike Ladd, Mr Len, Beans, Sam Sever and Psychopab pay tribute.

Picture from the United States Air Force Museum at WrightPatterson Air Force Base in Dayton Ohio. Most C-124s were transferred to the Air Force Reserve and the Air National Guard by 1970, and all were released from active service in mid-1974. The aircraft on display was assigned to the 165th Tactical Airlift group of the Georgia Air National Guard following its service with the USAF. It was flown to the museum in August 1975.

 

On trail to see the top of the world.

A view from the glacier at the base camp of Denali

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Base of V.L.T.G, place for chillout, psybient music.

 

Carbon Based Lifeforms - Or Plan B

 

Posted by Second Life Resident Liqueur Felix. Visit Impress Lab.

What are the alternatives for an oil-based mass production era? If we take a closer look at nature there are many qualities in organisms that can be applied to new production methods and material development. Formafantasma does just this, using for instance the excrements of insects (Shellac) to produce 3d printed objects. Or how about Thomas Vailly and Laura Lynn Janssen who grow stoneware, and Aagje Hoekstra who creates new bio plastics from beetle wings? Where do the future of 3d printing, art and bio-materials intersect? We learned more about all of this during this Biotalk.

 

Link event: www.mediamatic.net/380688/en/caco3-botanica-and-coleoptera

 

Photographer: Xiang Yu Yeung

Rollei Prego zoom

Schneider-Kreuznach AF-Variogon 35-70mm HFT

Fuji Velvia 50

Epson v700

I quite like this building, especially with some cool cloud behind it.

 

Check out my night version here

 

Please don't post any large or sparkly graphics in the comments.

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