New Orleans Airshow, Naval Air
Station Joint Reserve Base New Orleans, Belle Chase, LA
Purdue University Aviation Day,
West Lafayette, IN
C-47 Parachute
Drop at the Air Force Museum Good Neighbor Airshow,
Chamblee, GA
Spirit of St. Louis Airshow, Chesterfield, MO
Coles County Airport Airshow, Mattoon, IL
Marion, IN Fly-In/Cruise-In
Tri-State Warbird Museum Flying Showcase, Batavia,
OH Bowman Fest, Louisville,
KY
2022 Airshows
Dayton Airshow Warbird Photo Review
Warbirds at Dayton Airport, Vandalia, OH - July 30-31, 2022 -
Photos taken Sunday, July 31, 2022.
The Tora Group passes
in review in front of airshow center at the Dayton Airshow.
The wall of fire ignites once they are clear of the area.
The Tora Act was actually in the
middle of the show, but I have chosen to feature it first. The
orientation of the shot indicates that I am located a considerable
distance to the right of airshow center in the general admission seating
area. Airshow center was reserved for the sponsors of the event
and those who wish to pay extra to be at airshow center. As I
arrived early, I could have located myself closer to airshow center, but
I chose my location for a specific reason that will become obvious
later.
The Dayton Airshow was not in my
original 2022 airshow plans. Earlier in the year, a good friend of
mine offered me a Saturday Photo Pass that he knew he was not going to
be able to use. I looked at the airshow lineup and was not all
that impressed with what was coming to the event. I thanked my
friend for the offer but declined.
Things change. On Thursday,
July 28, 2022, an email from another friend noted that the Blues were
going to be at the Dayton Airshow. A review of the schedule
indicated that the event had added several military acts and fly-bys
which were of most interest to me. I was busy on the Saturday of
the show and decided to go over on Sunday. I am glad I did as I
really enjoyed the event. It was a great way to spend a day.
Originally, I was not going to do a
report when I made my decision to go to the event. However, the
show impressed me enough to take the time to do one. I no longer
do a report on every show I go to, only those that are new to me or I
think are worth the effort. This year's Dayton Airshow is one of
these.
Several other acts are not included
in this report. They are the Golden Knights, Kent Pietsch, Kevin
Coleman, CareFlight Medical Helicopter, and the Blue Angels.
The airshow announcers, Rob Reider
and Danny Clisham, did an excellent job of talking about the previous
act and masking the fact that Tora! Tora! Tora! was approaching from the
west. I had to tell several photographers to my right who were
busy talking that Tora was inbound. Speaking of the airshow
announcers, both were on their game on Sunday and were most informative.
I enjoyed listening to them and learned several new facts from them on
Sunday.
On my trip over to Dayton from
central Indiana, I could see dark cloud cover to the east where I was
headed. I was afraid it might be a gray day at the Dayton Airshow.
However, not long after arriving at the event, the skies cleared out and
we had a mixture of blue skies and puffy white clouds making a perfect
backdrop for aircraft photos.
At the end of the fifteen minute
routine, the Tora Group passes in review. It has been several
years since I have seen them, so I really enjoyed the routine.
This photo, taken at 9:02AM, is
the line of spectators waiting ahead of me for the gates to open at
9:00AM. I arrived at this location ten minutes earlier and found
this line. The line runs all the way up to the arch in the
background. This line should have started moving not long after
this photo. However, the airshow's WiFi was not working, so the
airshow personnel at the gate could not scan tickets. The problem
did not get resolved until almost 9:30AM. This location is more
than half the distance from the parking lot and by the time the gates
opened, the line was all the way back to the parking lot. There
was a considerable number of spectators that arrived early to see the
show.
Note that several persons have
umbrellas. There was some very light rain in the area as I
arrived. The cloud cover that I drove under to get to the show can
be seen except for clear skies in the west. The clear skies moved
which made for good weather at the show.
I think this is only the second
time I have seen a de Havilland Vampire fly at an airshow. The
announcers did a great job of explaining this aircraft and its
capabilities to the spectators. A couple of facts I learned were
that over 3,200 were built, and it was the first jet powered aircraft to
take off and land from an aircraft carrier. One of its uses in
combat was during the Suez Crisis of 1956.
The Vampire was armed with four
20mm cannons.
The original airshow schedule
listed the Vampire as flying after the F-15 Eagle. While the
Vampire is an impressive aircraft to watch and listen to, placing it
after the newer and more capable, high performance F-15 would have been
counterproductive. The show changed the order and flew it before
the Eagle act. This was the perfect place for it.
The airshow's website listed that
there was going to be an F-15 fly-by, which was sort of ambiguous.
I was thinking it would be one or two passes by a single F-15.
When I arrived and saw two F-15s from NAS Joint Base New Orleans sitting
out in front of the crowd line, I knew that the fly-bys would be
impressive. There were multiple individual high speed passes by
each aircraft followed by a tight formation pass. The aircraft
then left the airshow area and returned to New Orleans.
This was a unique helicopter
routine. Firstly, there is a Vietnam era AH-1 Cobra flying at the
same time as a current Army AH-64 Apache. Secondly, the two
helicopters are flown by a father in the Cobra and his son in the
Apache.
Both helicopters did some
maneuvering at airshow center.
I think this is a first for me, as
I do not remember ever seeing an E-3 AWACs aircraft fly at an airshow.
If I have, it has been so long ago I can't remember it. This was a
Sunday only event so my pick of going this day enabled me to see it.
The E-3 gave us two nice low
passes and then continued on to the west. By this time of the day,
the crowd had filled in the all of the general admission area.
Empty spaces of grass were becoming few and far between.
The last time I visited the Dayton
Airshow was in 2017. I came that year specifically to see the F-35
demonstration aircraft in its first year. At that show, I sat to
the east not far from where I sat this year. That location allowed
me to be right in front of the F-35 as it prepared for flight and its
recovery afterwards. This year I set up in front of the F-16
demonstration aircraft for the same reasons.
One of Captain Fiedler's ground
crew assists her with her flight gear.
In all of the years I have been to
airshows, I have not had the opportunity to watch a pilot climb the
ladder to the cockpit. The first step is a considerable distance
from the ground.
The Viper Demo is ready to taxi.
I like the F-16 demonstration as
it is loud. The aircraft also turns around and gets back in front of the
crowd in short order. For this event, I did not take many photos
of the demo so I could enjoy the flying without seeing it through the
view finder of my camera. However, I did take a few, of which
several samples are shown here. The three below are from the
Heritage Flight.
Next up was the USMC CH-53 Super
Stallion act.
As the CH-53 was moving to airshow
center, the C-17 was taxiing out for its aerial demonstration.
The F-16 was also coming back in
after its flight.
The CH-53 went to airshow center
and did the typical turn-arounds and sideways movements helicopters
normally do at airshows. In this case they were done by a really
big helicopter.
It then flew backwards to its
parking location behind the Blue Angels.
This is the shot I missed in March
at the Naval Air Station Joint Base New Orleans. I had left the
crowd line at New Orleans as a civilian act was flying. As I was
walking back to my seat, this F-16 taxied by my seat location.
The last act of the day for me was the C-17 Demonstration. I had
planned on watching the Blues, but with the huge crowd size and the two
hour drive home, I once again left before their flight. However,
while walking back to the parking lot, the four-ship formation flew
directly over me inbound for one of their early passes. I also saw
several other low flights in the parking lot, so all was not lost.
Fighter pilots are well known for
talking with their hands. Captain Fiedler talked to her ground
crew from the cockpit and used hand gestures to demonstrate what she was
talking about.
There were several groups of
visitors to the F-16 Demo aircraft during the day. This included
the little guy in the lower right-hand section of the photo. He is
talking with someone not in the photo, most likely his mother. He
appears to be gesturing at the aircraft and saying, "Mommy, do you think
I can sit in the cockpit?"
Of course he can!
I had no idea I was going to take a photo
like this when I located my chair in front of the F-16 Demo first thing
in the morning. As I consider this my best shot of the day, I will
end my report of a very nice visit to the 2022 Dayton Airshow with this
photo.
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