Comment by dylan604 15 hours ago Was it flying at the same time? Maybe your plane is visible in the WB-57's imagery? 3 comments dylan604 Reply jstanley 15 hours ago Maybe stretched out into one massive smear of a plane, like when you drag your hand across a flatbed scanner dylan604 11 hours ago How long of an exposure do you think they would be taking? jhayward 7 hours ago It's not uncommon for older aerial photos to be single-pixel lines that the film is moved past. The motion of the film is correlated with the motion across the ground, so you can reconstruct a 2nd axis from the exposure.There's no shutter speed, it's continuous.
jstanley 15 hours ago Maybe stretched out into one massive smear of a plane, like when you drag your hand across a flatbed scanner dylan604 11 hours ago How long of an exposure do you think they would be taking? jhayward 7 hours ago It's not uncommon for older aerial photos to be single-pixel lines that the film is moved past. The motion of the film is correlated with the motion across the ground, so you can reconstruct a 2nd axis from the exposure.There's no shutter speed, it's continuous.
dylan604 11 hours ago How long of an exposure do you think they would be taking? jhayward 7 hours ago It's not uncommon for older aerial photos to be single-pixel lines that the film is moved past. The motion of the film is correlated with the motion across the ground, so you can reconstruct a 2nd axis from the exposure.There's no shutter speed, it's continuous.
jhayward 7 hours ago It's not uncommon for older aerial photos to be single-pixel lines that the film is moved past. The motion of the film is correlated with the motion across the ground, so you can reconstruct a 2nd axis from the exposure.There's no shutter speed, it's continuous.
Maybe stretched out into one massive smear of a plane, like when you drag your hand across a flatbed scanner
How long of an exposure do you think they would be taking?
It's not uncommon for older aerial photos to be single-pixel lines that the film is moved past. The motion of the film is correlated with the motion across the ground, so you can reconstruct a 2nd axis from the exposure.
There's no shutter speed, it's continuous.