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  2. Fairchild K-20 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fairchild_K-20

    The K-20 is an aerial photography camera used during World War II, famously from the Enola Gay's tail gunner position to photograph the nuclear mushroom cloud over Hiroshima. [1] Designed by Fairchild Camera and Instrument , approximately 15,000 were manufactured under licence for military contract by Folmer Graflex Corporation in Rochester ...

  3. Matagorda Peninsula Army Airfield - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Matagorda_Peninsula_Army...

    Matagorda Peninsula Army Airfield is a closed military airfield, located on Matagorda Island, Texas. It was used during World War II as a training airfield by the 77th Flying Training Wing, Army Air Forces Central Flying Training Command.

  4. Fairchild Camera and Instrument - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fairchild_Camera_and...

    In 1944, Fairchild changed the company name from Fairchild Aviation to Fairchild Camera and Instrument Corporation. Its product portfolio expanded during World War II from aerial photography equipment to include machine gun cameras, x-ray cameras, radar cameras, gun synchronizers, and radio compasses.

  5. Aerial reconnaissance in World War II - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aerial_reconnaissance_in...

    The cameras were controlled remotely by the crew from the cockpit. Other configurations arose as needed. [53] Japanese cameras were a mixture of domestic and imported/copied types. The Navy often used copies of the American Fairchild K-8 and K-20, and also a copy of the U.S. Navy's F-8. The Army used small, usually handheld Type 96, 99 (K-20 ...

  6. Arriflex 35 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arriflex_35

    The US army captured some models and brought this camera to the US in the 1940s, where it served as a prototype for the almost identical Cineflex PH 330. [3] Due to its importance during World war II footage, Arriflex 35 cameras were later used in the Nuremberg Trials.The original Arriflex 35 had three Arri standard mounts on a rotating turret ...

  7. Berlyn Brixner - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Berlyn_Brixner

    During World War II, he was hired at the Los Alamos National Laboratory to work on photography problems connected with the Manhattan Project in the Optics Engineering and High Speed Photography Group in Los Alamos under the direction of Professor Julian Mack, the group invented and constructed extremely high speed cameras. [2] [4]

  8. Texas World War II Army airfields - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Texas_World_War_II_Army...

    During World War II, the United States Army Air Forces established numerous airfields in Texas for training pilots and aircrews. The amount of available land and the temperate climate made Texas a prime location for year-round military training. By the end of the war, 65 Army airfields were built in the state. [1]

  9. Argus (camera company) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Argus_(camera_company)

    Argus introduced the Argus Model 21 in 1947, a metal-bodied camera and the company’s first model with an automatic shutter cocking to prevent double exposure and a hot shoe for flash. [3] By the end of World War II, Argus had won the Army-Navy “E” award five times for “excellence in design and manufacture of war-related material".