Recty
New member
I'm pretty excited, in about 2 hours I'll be heading out in a helicopter to get some pictures of the power plant that powers 75% of Alaska.
I work for the power company and we do an annual report which is mailed to all our customers plus an annual meeting with a slideshow. Our current database of pictures for the plant is pretty old and nothing too great, so they asked if I would go and I jumped at the chance.
Anyone have any tips to give me? I'll be taking the pictures out of a Bell 206L4 Longranger (http://www.bellhelicopter.textron.com/en/aircraft/commercial/bell206L-4.cfm) which has curved windows, but it also has small ports that can slide open for picture taking which I'm going to try to use as much as possible since I know how curved plexiglass affects picture quality
I plan on basically taking 8 pictures around the plant at about 3 or 4 different elevations. So I'll circle the plant and take pictures every 40 or 50 degrees, then rise up another 500 feet and do it again.
I work for the power company and we do an annual report which is mailed to all our customers plus an annual meeting with a slideshow. Our current database of pictures for the plant is pretty old and nothing too great, so they asked if I would go and I jumped at the chance.
Anyone have any tips to give me? I'll be taking the pictures out of a Bell 206L4 Longranger (http://www.bellhelicopter.textron.com/en/aircraft/commercial/bell206L-4.cfm) which has curved windows, but it also has small ports that can slide open for picture taking which I'm going to try to use as much as possible since I know how curved plexiglass affects picture quality

I plan on basically taking 8 pictures around the plant at about 3 or 4 different elevations. So I'll circle the plant and take pictures every 40 or 50 degrees, then rise up another 500 feet and do it again.