Plane-spotting in Manchester, NH
Last weekend I got to drive to Manchester, so I used the opportunity to kill some time near the airport by watching planes and taking photos (gallery).
The winds were coming from the south, so runway 17 was in use. I think those are the best plane spotting conditions at KMHT.
It is relatively easy to watch aircraft depart and fly directly overhead:
Unlike all my previous plane spotting, this time I tried something new—inspired by Mike Kelly’s Airportraits, I decided to try to make some composite images. Here is a Southwest Boeing 737 sporting one of the special liveries:
It was certainly an interesting experience.
At first I thought that I would be able to use the 7 frames/second that the D750 can do for the whole departure, but it turns out that the planes move far too slowly, so the camera buffer filled up way too soon and the frame rate became somewhat erratic. What mostly ended up working was switching to 3 frames/second and taking bursts. Next time, aiming for about 2 frames/second should give me enough images to work with.
Even though I used a tripod, I expected that I would have to align the images to remove the minor misalignment between images due to the vibration from the rather strong wind and my hand depressing the shutter. It turns out that the misalignment (of approximately 10 pixels) was minor enough that it did not change the final image.
Here’s an American Airlines commuter taking off from runway 17. (I repositioned to get a less head-on photo as well.)
For those curious, I post processed each of the images in Lightroom, exported them as TIFFs, and then used GIMP to do the layering and masking. Finally, I exported the final image and imported it back into Lightroom for safekeeping.
As a final treat, as I was packing up a US Army Gulfstream took off:
As far as I can tell, they use this one to transport VIPs. I wonder who was on board…