View allAll Photos Tagged explosive
I liked the way the HDR brought the contrast in the cloud, I think might have overdone it a bit though
IED is an evenings of playful praxis. The audience is confronted with exciting participatory performance, provocative sounds, startling images, and several shocking costume changes. Most of the material is clearly not ours and you can dance to it.
Soldiers of the 1138th Engineer Sapper Company out of Farmington and Fredericktown, conduct live demolition and IED training during their annual training at Fort Leonard Wood. The Soldiers got hands-on training on how to put together and detonate field expedient anti-personnel explosives. Two days were also dedicated to IED training, where Soldiers learned how to search for, identify and properly report IEDs to command.
Oops, shouldn't have done that. I knew better, I even have forma education not to overload a device. Haha I think it was already done and it was fun having a sound of an m80 going off in my living room. Luckily the casing prevented any debris from flying around. The blown capacitor provided the bang and the fried ic the smoke.
A U.S. Army M109-A6 Paladin Self-Propelled Howitzer operated by A Battery, 4th Battalion, 27th Field Artillery, Division Artillery (DIVARTY), 1st Armored Division, fires it’s 155 millimeter main gun during the second day of DART (Division Artillery Readiness Test) at Dona Ana firing range just outside Fort Bliss, Texas, Dec. 8, 2015. DART is a new, three-day exercise that will determine the readiness of DIVARTY FA units through live-fire exercises, react to contact, improvised explosive device (IED) defense and casualty and vehicle evacuation. (U.S. Army Photo by Sgt. James Avery, 16th Mobile Public Affairs Detachment)
Seamlessly Looping Background Animation Of Arm Your Video Library With Digital Explosions. Checkout GlobalArchive.com, contact ChrisDortch@gmail.com, and connect to www.linkedin.com/in/chrisdortch
Jerry has one of Michael's homemade bottle rockets in his mouth. It's made out of PVC and jet fuel. It even has a duct tape "tail fin" He didn't launch it out of his mouth, of course.
Part of the Bee Bee station coal facility.
Speedgraphic, 101mm Optar, 1/200 @ f22, Ilford Delta 400, 6x7, K1 filter, scanned from the negative.