A German Focke Wulf 190D image was created for National Air and Space Intelligence Center Foreign Materiel Exploitation ribbon cutting ceremony, at Wright-Patterson Air Force Base, Ohio, Oct. 20, 2017. The building was named after Army Air Force pilot, 1st Lt William Vernon Haynes, who crashed and died in the line of duty while fling an German Focke Wulf 190D on September 22, 1945. Haynes Hall, the new FME building, will double the lab space, enabling NASIC to execute its foreign material exploitation mission. The entire presentation is a 3D rendered scene created in Newtek Lightwave
A German Focke Wulf 190D image was created for National Air and Space Intelligence Center Foreign Materiel Exploitation ribbon cutting ceremony, at Wright-Patterson Air Force Base, Ohio, Oct. 20, 2017. The building was named after Army Air Force pilot, 1st Lt William Vernon Haynes, who crashed and died in the line of duty while fling an German Focke Wulf 190D on September 22, 1945. Haynes Hall, the new FME building, will double the lab space, enabling NASIC to execute its foreign material exploitation mission. The entire presentation is a 3D rendered scene created in Newtek Lightwave. The image was framed with a piece of wreckage from the original crashed aircraft and presented to Gen. Stephen Wilson, Vice Chief of the Air Force at the 2017 National Air and Space Intelligence Center Centennial Ball. The framed images are currently hanging on displayed within Haynes Hall, NASIC, and the Pentagon.
Size: 4800px × 3000px
Photo credit: © AB Forces News Collection / Alamy / Afripics
License: Licensed
Model Released: No
Keywords: 190d, air, aircraft, center, focke, german, haynes, intelligence, nasic, national, space, threat, visualization, wulf