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Question:

How to take the best images of fire and firefighters at night?

I shoot with a Nikon D200 and was invited on a photo op by our local fire fighters during several of their training sessions. Some of this training will be performed at nightsome during the day. I would like some pointers as to camera settings night (and day) for the best possible shots of capturing fireparticularly at night.Any and all suggestions are welcomeI am an on location portrait photographer so this would be a new experience.

Answer:

AWA was the first wrestling I ever saw.. and who can forget the Sheiks under Adnan el Kassie Cutronim.. You're thinking of Colonel DeBeers not sure of the real guy ( should) but he was a major heel billed from South Africa, and Playing the racist apartheid support to the hilt one of his go-to heat generators would be refusing to even touch a Black wrestler and attempting to forfeit rather than fight, until the Face would attack him to force the fight and while almost if not all of the guys everyone has mentioned put in time in AWA you need to remember that in the territory days 80% of anyone who was anyone worked in almost every territory at some point Lawler and the Von Erichs were more famous out of USWA/WCCW Flair only broke un with AWA having been trained by Verne Gagne he didn't become big until JCP/NWA
There are several ways to extinguish a fire and you'll often see a fire triangle or a fire tetrahedron when learning how to extinguish fires. The fire tetrahedron consists of: Heat Oxygen Fuel The chemical reaction is at the center of the tetrahedron The idea is that all of those parts need to be together in order for the fire to continue burning. If you remove one part, the fire stops burning. The carbon dioxide fire extinguisher works by DISPLACING OXYGEN. Without oxygen, the fire can no longer burn. Carbon dioxide is also a bit more dense than air, so it's a good gas for getting the oxygen away from the fire to make it stop burning.

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