BIO
Married, 2 kids, mostly happily employed. Found Rendo in the fall of 2004, though at this point I don't remember just how I ended up here anymore. Probably linked off a fantasy art site somewhere perhaps. Lurked and checked out all the cool artwork for a few months before downloading DAZ|Studio and trying my hand at a few images. Had enough fun with that and the luck to have worked a significant amount of overtime at the time to purchase Poser 5 & PSP9 without busting the budget. Do well enough in Poser, though not nearly as well as I'd like. There's just not enough time in the day to do it all. When not working, doing things with family or Posering I love to read Sci-Fi and Fantasy (mostly), play computer games and chat with friends online. I've yet to chat with anybody here. And while I'm on MSN quite frequently it's almost always with the ID that I run in my Harry Potter game. So, that being said, should you wish to converse, I can be reached on MSN at janussparhawkAThotmail.com (replace AT with @) I'd love to get to know you all more. :)
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Comments (20)
CaperGirl42
wow isn't that a big beautiful babe....lol- love this jon- give anything to fly in one of these- man now you have me anxious - cant wait to see the next ones- hehe awesome pic loves it hugz anne
irakika
Excellent photo again, nice view!
PIERRE25
Un avion imposant, belle photo!!!
erlandpil
Good photo again erland
jdehaven
I've seen video footage of these guys providing refueling services- pretty freaky stuff- when you think of all the turbulence and moving about through the air- then to be physically connected to another airplane while dumping hundreds of gallons in minutes... Great shots so far John, I guess you could be considered the tour guide on a series of educational expeditions with your photography- which is probably the coolest thing of all! Keep 'em coming man!
tallpindo
I worked on reengining these when I worked for United Technologies in 1979. It was a bit hopeless trying to show the CFM-56 was too big for the plane. The JT-8D even as a -208 wasn't really high enough bypass and new enough technology to shake the fuel offload deficit. That was a quandry as my knowledge of the plane came from a Navigator study where the boom operator took sun shots to fix azimuth and the Doppler radar calculated wind drift angle from sea surface scatter. What I really needed to know is why did it take so long to make the Irish built IAE 2500 out of the F-100 core. Come to think of it how long did it take to make IAE (International Aero Engines)? Meanwhile the KC-10 was coming into being. Studies were being made of putting a refueling glove onto a KC-135 so a tanker could tank a tanker. It's like a rifle now. Just something a soldier uses. It's in inventory and people know how to keep it flying. The better wing leading and trailing edges of the 320 version of the 707 never came, nor the glass cockpit. Some have inertial navigators like the C-141 but I think they are the laser gyro type not the LTN-51 that propagated into commercial use for polar flights without a human navigator. Density is the key to tankers. Fuel weighs about 6.4 pounds per gallon for JP-4 though I think they use JP-8 now. Cargo sometime flys by cube, sometimes by pallet density and sometimes by oversize, or even out size with ease of loading paramount. One of the cool features of this airplane is the twin tandem landing gear wheels.
RodolfoCiminelli
A excellent photo and beautiful natural lighting....!!!
Syltermermaid
It sounds may be silly, but I'm always amazed that this heavy machines fly!!! It is for me still a miracle and I love flying!! Wonderful captured and thanks for sharing, Hugs Ute
Starlift
This is like old home week, John. All the aircraft lately have been the ones I worked on while I was in the Air Force or when I worked for Northrop Grumman. Great photos!
brycek
Fantastic shot John..love all the planes!!
awadissk
excellent
sessan53
Excellent shot. Very great work on this picture:-)hugs sessan
meselfr
very cool
Bossie_Boots
Oh wow my dad god bless him would of loved these wonderful capture john hugs lou x
drifterlee
Awesome plane!
RobyHermida
WWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWW
TheAnimaGemini
Gorgeous shot John. Fantastic impressive.
Osper
Not bad for an aircraft that is 40 to 50 years old. When ordered the Air Force had the choice of using a wing built for turbo jets or they could order a stronger wing for the fan jets (more power) coming into use. The DOD chose to go with the smaller (cheaper) wings, the airlines chose the stronger wings and waited. The 135's were called water wagons (among other things) as they could use a water injection system to augment thrust on take off. The gross wieght at take off in war time was calculated so that the weight of the aircraft would be at max inflight gross at the time the wheels went in the well. In the early 1970's DOD did a study as to the possibility of putting fan jets on them and the cost was found to be almost as much as the cost of the original fleet. So much for planning ahead. The Air Force did have a handful of the "C" models which had fans and were much more powerfull. They used GE engines (if I remember right). Most were special VIP models or command post aircraft. The command post aircraft had inflight refueling capability so you could take on fuel while flying around in circles!. The "R" finally rectified something that should have been done in the first place. Nice shot.
skyla824
nice photo
Gor111
Wowww this plane looks really huge and gorgeous! Stunning such a monster can fly! LOL