The Tulsa Forum by TulsaNow

Talk About Tulsa => Other Tulsa Discussion => Topic started by: Ed W on May 25, 2014, 11:43:42 am



Title: More from the Lufthansa boneyard
Post by: Ed W on May 25, 2014, 11:43:42 am
I saw this yesterday.

(https://lh4.googleusercontent.com/-p50XbbYupfQ/U4IqZRaAQFI/AAAAAAAAVOU/h4bdna3FYBM/w563-h423-no/P5243225%25282%2529.jpg)

It doesn't quite compare to this nose art, however:

(https://lh3.googleusercontent.com/-P17HfXcf0GQ/Tqh-bVnyubI/AAAAAAAAE5M/vj__4523bA4/w564-h423-no/tmpCC56.jpg)

(https://lh6.googleusercontent.com/-iu98HZZofK4/Tq2hzAO6fsI/AAAAAAAAE9k/P1uAfnNy8n0/w587-h423-no/tmp500B.jpg)


Title: Re: More from the Lufthansa boneyard
Post by: Ed W on August 23, 2015, 10:14:03 am
They're scrapping another 747.

(https://lh3.googleusercontent.com/UyMJcCHkZsuVn3EOICOErpnscsHdYFRQN4HTH5WSaLBmW9yMVWNvIZG-Si1o6XTA3dQESy4BC_ELjws3KZJzfC6Bfy8lNh7StsCNXya3rIRDheMOAkCtFiM4P4hGBppjAqW7P5MFVGpq6fHCUVI_NGWEy-sd6KZdHYFoPItwqMZhTEUdkmdqmjbv2OCTYkS3wKfVLiYngI3c-DrbuBAV7UXGKjsJxHnmtz9RT2r0o1l2xv3CaapdWHD8XAJBBY59YrqIdBXu-8MYv3fsRPf6KMWL_pYCDigZGa0hMtkG_XsrAYf8iTHisad-tfM233X0lx-W2XSdPo9uwAJDOClvzB9cWn6MGTf5UCIoLO_fUEGCXpCX_6G-_2wlpgWj-drBUBnHkdoaNaZYtFG3hNqoNTIz2IxsonQHWcPhoXOmZM5d3a1qp3WpOfQL2FO9dYLA3w-ANzjWdIA8LGZP2RHWAcPUeOOXLfDd9hTLYAKu78rh3jlZySBwoe_uB2C_okyfF9xFKxI=w647-h486-no)


Title: Re: More from the Lufthansa boneyard
Post by: Red Arrow on August 23, 2015, 10:31:39 am
They're scrapping another 747.

Long camera lens or can you get up close?


Title: Re: More from the Lufthansa boneyard
Post by: Ed W on August 23, 2015, 10:40:02 am
It's a 40-15mm lens on an Olympus Pen, equivalent to 80-300 mm on a 35 mm film camera. I'm finding that careful manual focusing is often more accurate than autofocus.


Title: Re: More from the Lufthansa boneyard
Post by: Red Arrow on August 23, 2015, 10:49:24 am
It's a 40-150mm lens on an Olympus Pen, equivalent to 80-300 mm on a 35 mm film camera. I'm finding that careful manual focusing is often more accurate than autofocus.

It's interesting how lens lengths are all compared to 35mm when 35mm used to be the "small format".