Advertising Air Force
AERIAL BANNERS COME IN THREE FORMS

Copy banners are comprised of 5 foot high or 7 foot high letters.
These messages can be created and modified quickly. For heartfelt messages, a 5 foot high or 7 foot high heart can be included.

Aerial billboards can be as large as 50 feet tall and 100 feet long.
These billboards are constructed of lightweight, translucent nylon with full-color graphics. An aerial billboard can be machine printed, or painted by hand. Aerial billboards usually require about one week to design/produce.

Aerial billboards can be combined with copy for coporate visibility and specific, timely messages.
Once an aerial billboard is created it can be reused many times with your choice of copy messages.


The first step in flying your aerial banner is to determine exactly what you would like to say, and where you would like it to fly.
Copy banners are limited to 55 characters and/or spaces; we can help you to get the most out of what you would like to say. We can fly your message virtually anywhere allowing you to target your audience with amazing accuracy.

Building the banner:
Once you've scheduled the date, time, and location, your banner is constructed of 5 foot high or 7 seven foot high black, nylon letters.

Preparing the banner for flight:
Each banner is carefully proofed for content and spelling, a lead pole and bridal are attached, and then the banner is rolled up for storage/transport.

Ready to fly:
Airplanes cannot take-off or land with a banner in tow. The tow plane has to "pick up" the banner in flight.

In order to get your banner aloft, it is laid flat on the ground in a field on the airport. A tow rope attached to the banner is suspended above the ground with two pick-up poles.

Getting the banner off the ground:
After take-off, the pilot deploys a grapple hook attached to a towing assembly located on the tail of the airplane. The pilot then manuevers to hook the tow rope with the grapple hook and lifts the banner airborne.

Upon completion of the flight, the pilot returns to the airfield and drops the grapple hook and banner at low altitude via a release handle located in the cockpit.

The banner is recovered and prepped to fly again, or the letters are disassembled for reuse.


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