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
Spirit of St. Louis Airshow, Chesterfield, MO
Dayton Airshow, Vandalia, OH
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
Good Neighbor Airshow Photo Review
Peachtree DeKalb Airport,
Chamblee, GA - May 14, 2022
(The airport is also known as Dekalb Peachtree Airport.
The airport uses both names on its webpage. Its designator is PDK.
DeKalb is the county it is in.)
I was totally unaware of this show
until two months before the event date. This show has been around
for quite a long time and somehow I had missed its existence.
While it has missed several years due to airport construction and the
pandemic, the 2022 edition of the event was to celebrate the 80th
Anniversary of the Atlanta Naval Air Station, which was originally
located at what is now the Peachtree DeKalb Airport. A large
number of World War Two Navy aircraft were booked to come to the event.
While several did not make it due to weather, the show ran just fine
without them. I was most pleased with the collection of warbirds
that did arrive and fly the show.
I took a very large number of photos
in the six hours I was at the airport. The few below are a sample
to give a flavor of the show. I have tried to include one photo of
each warbird that flew. With the exception of one civilian act
that flew twice, this was a pure warbird show.
This is the story of two locations where I
set up during the show. For the first two-thirds of the show I was
located where I could watch the aircraft as they taxied by me and listen
to the sounds of large displacement warbird piston engines.
The first location had me in front of a
taxiway where on occasion, when I wasn't paying enough attention, I had
my chair blown over.
For the last third of the show, I relocated
to the south parking lot, where I was able to obtain better
ground-to-air photos.
However, I am getting ahead of myself.
Once onto the airshow grounds, I decided to locate here for the show.
To the north of my location were the fighters and bombers.
To the south was the civilian act and the
formation aircraft.
On the second row to the north were
multi-engine warbirds and several trainers.
The static display area was on the north end
of the field and included two T-28s and a T-34.
The new "Spirit of Freedom" C-54 was on
display with two Blackhawks.
There were two F-18s and five T-45 Goshawks
on display.
"The Spirit of Freedom" had a large car show
on one side of it and fire apparatus on the other.
I had made all of my rounds and visited all
of the displays both on the ramp and in one of the hangars. I had
settled in to eat lunch when the F6F arrived. This is the first
time I had seen it since the 2013 Chino Airshow. It came all the
way from San Diego, CA for this event.
The show opened with a flag jump with the
AeroShell Aerobatic Team flying around the jumper.
I don't think I have ever been at a show
where I have had the opportunity to photograph the jumper coming
straight at me.
The show started with some traditional
trainer fly-bys. First was this formation of T-6s.
While T-6 formation fly-bys at airshows are
pretty common, Stearman formations are not. This was really nice
to see. Interestingly enough, these four aircraft came in from a
remote airport and went directly into the airshow pattern.
The Grumman Hellcat did a quick turn-around
for fuel and oil. It was the first fighter of the day in the air.
The Hellcat and this Kate replica did a
dogfight sequence for the spectators. Here the Kate is taxiing
back to its parking place.
A formation pass of the two Grumman fighters
at the event.
This is the first time I have seen the Lima
Lima Flight Team in long time. For this event there were two T-34s
and one Yak 52TW as part of the act.
Here the Cavanaugh Flight Museum's EA-1E
Skyraider is giving the crowd a nice banana pass.
The P-40 is coming down the taxiway.
The P-51 was next.
The Skyraider folded its wings for the
spectators at the south end of the crowd line.
And once again it taxied by me.
This and the next five photos show the TBM,
SB2C, and SBD start-ups and taxiing by me.
While the Navy bombers were starting up and
taxiing out, the P-51 and P-40 did individual and formation flybys.
The Lima Lima Flight Team flew next.
There is always lots of engine oil to clean
up after a Skyraider flies.
The TBM on take-off.
The SBD.
The SB2C.
The two T-34s taxied back into their
respective parking places in unison.
It was time for the multi-engine Navy
aircraft to perform.
World War Two paratrooper re-enactors are
getting ready to load up for a demonstration jump.
When the Navy bombers came back in, I
decided to move. While a couple of them would be going back out
for the show finale, I wanted a location that gave a better view of the
flying aircraft. My original position was on a north-south crowd
line. However, the active runway was 21L. At my location, I
was 1,270 feet from the center of runway 21L. By moving south, I
would be closer to the active runway.
While I was moving, the AeroShell Team was
flying. This photo was taken near the south end of the crowd line.
I kept on going and went back out to my
vehicle in the parking lot. This location made for better
ground-to-air photos along with being able to better hear the engines in
take-off power. There is just a touch of residual smoke left in
the air from the AeroShell Team.
The C-45 had to come through some of the
smoke left by the AeroShell Team.
Then it was in clear air.
This turned out to be a great location when
the warbirds did right-hand patterns.
The C-47 took off with its load of
paratroopers.
At this point, the flight crew is shutting
down engine number one. During its flight it was "popping."
The C-47 taxied into the main taxiway and shut down. A tug had to
come to take it back to the other end of the field.
Next off were several aircraft that were
departing for home. The P-40 was one of them.
The AeroShell Team also left.
It was quiet for a few minutes. Then I
could hear the faint sounds of radial engines. Then over a rise in
the runway the B-25 appeared as part of the airshow finale.
The FM-2, F6F, SBD, and EA-E1 all
participated in the finale.
Some of the passes were left-hand patterns.
Others were right-hand patterns.
There were at least three of each.
There was a lot of flying still left at end of the show.
The SBD and B-25 landed and then the
remaining three aircraft did a formation fly-by.
It was a great show. Now that I know
this show exists, I look forward to coming back again.
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