Show me your CAG/CDR birds
Forum rules
This is the forum to share your recent aviation photos with the rest of the community, being photos not older than six months at the moment of topic opening. Theme-based topics, not about recent events, should go into the sub-forum. Although we will not screen beforehand, we reserve the right to delete any images, especially if clearly unsharp or otherwise low in quality. For more information on how to upload you images, check this post. In topic titles, please use airfield names in stead of just codes, and be clear about what kind of photos your viewers can expect (e.g. CIV/MIL, location etc.). Finally, bring any photo criticism understandable and to the point, not cynical or offensive! Simultaneously, do not feel offended by criticism per se, but simply explain your motives, taste et cetera, or ignore if you wish so. |
Show me your CAG/CDR birds
A topic dedicated to the CAG/CDR-Bird, do you have some examples share them with us. I will start with this one:
CAG-bird F/A-18D 165413/VK-01 VMFA(AW)-121
CAG-bird F/A-18D 165413/VK-01 VMFA(AW)-121
Last edited by mwpeters on 27 Jun 2008, 19:22, edited 1 time in total.
In fact, that's the real definition of a CAG. I think the one in the picture is "just" a squadron commander (wiki).mwpeters wrote:Beside this, there are also aircraft were CAG marks are assigned when it is a Wing Commander aircraft.
Interesting picture nonetheless... I thought most of the USMC commander birds had black tails nowadays.
Last edited by SquAdmin on 27 Jun 2008, 07:46, edited 2 times in total.
Greetz,
Patrick
Patrick
- Joris van Boven
- Scramble Die-Hard
- Posts: 883
- Joined: 28 Aug 2002, 12:57
- Type of spotter: F5
- Location: Eindhoven, the Netherlands
- Contact:
-
- Scramble Junior
- Posts: 108
- Joined: 22 May 2008, 14:14
- Subscriber Scramble: Guus Geluk
The Marines have been using camo this for some years now and started testing well before the Slovak MiG-29 was sprayed in a bits and bytes scheme. I wonder if the USMC experiments were succesful, since it still hasn't been applied to other aircraft yet.Thijs wrote:WOW after the Slovakian MiG-29 also the Marines use the "digital camo". Great picture!
(Who needs camouflage anyway in "beyond visual range" wars?)
Greetz,
Patrick
Patrick
- Richard from Rotterdam
- Scramble Master
- Posts: 2679
- Joined: 09 Aug 2004, 12:38
Typically you'll find one, maybe two aircraft on a carrier marked "CAG" for Commander Air Group. Although the Carrier Air Groups have been redesignated as Carrier Air Wings, they kept the CAG-designation for the wing commander. They used to paint some of them in rainbow markings, to represent the whole Carrier Air Wing.
They will normally be the "Double Nuts" of a squadron, but not necessarily.
Almost every squadron has a Double Nuts (x00) in high viz markings, but these are not by definition CAG-birds. The squadron commander's name will normally be on them, they might even mark the aircraft with "CO" (Commanding Officer) or sometimes you'll find "XO" on the x01, which will be flown by the squadron's Executive Officer.
They will normally be the "Double Nuts" of a squadron, but not necessarily.
Almost every squadron has a Double Nuts (x00) in high viz markings, but these are not by definition CAG-birds. The squadron commander's name will normally be on them, they might even mark the aircraft with "CO" (Commanding Officer) or sometimes you'll find "XO" on the x01, which will be flown by the squadron's Executive Officer.
- Joris van Boven
- Scramble Die-Hard
- Posts: 883
- Joined: 28 Aug 2002, 12:57
- Type of spotter: F5
- Location: Eindhoven, the Netherlands
- Contact:
- dinovandoorn
- Scramble Addict
- Posts: 1500
- Joined: 20 Jun 2006, 09:31
- Subscriber Scramble: dinovandoorn
- Contact: