I have zero desire to join in that trainwreck, so I’ll simply say this: if they exist, show me one. Just one. Not a blurry picture, no coverup excuses, no suppositions from UFOlogists, just show me a single UFO of extraterrestrial/alien origin.
You’re late. We already concluded that I misheard/misidentified the story as pertaining to SR-71s when it might’ve happened with an XP-49 instead. In that case it would still be striking because jet technology was not at all widely known of, and there’d be a gorilla flying a propellerless plane.
Sorry, which class of UFO are we comparing it to? The xenu class attack UFO or the mrryyxxyy class scout or what?
And yeah - that’s not what happened here, but I could definitely see the SR-71 being mistaken for a UFO before it was well known to the public. It looks nearly alien just due to badassedness, and oh, it flies faster than any other plane ever did. So if you happened to see it flying across 5 or 10 times faster than any other air traffic, plus it could be silent or sound weird because it’s flying past its sound waves (so the sound comes late and from a weird direction) or it’s flying so high that it appears to be silent, why not?
Please confine your stupid to your little corner and stop dribbling it all over everyone else’s nice threads.
I know. I was feeling rather surly this morning. It happens sometimes.
The B-2’s engines are masked and ducted to reduce noise. I don’t know firsthand if it’s audible from the ground when when it’s at altitude, but considerable effort has been made to render it quiet, so I’m guessing “extremely noisy” is something you just threw out as a criticism and not reality-based.
Erm, no! Or did that one have its muffler removed?
Could y’all remember to leave the personal insults out of the discussion, please?
Thanks,
twickster, MPSIMS moderator
He made a statement about the B2 stealth bomber and you reply with a clip of an SR-71 Blackbird?
Apples and Oranges
Here’s a naive question: what happens to the missles that missed you? Do they fall back to earth and blow up someone’s house?
This kinda irks me.
I know that, in general, when people are talking about “UFO”'s what they actually are trying to say is “Alien Spacecraft”. However we all know “UFO” stands for “Unidentified Flying Object”. Which is exactly what you saw. (Or maybe you already knew it was a B2. In which case, you actually saw an “IFO”)
@ CalMeacham
I know. My bad. I can’t find a youtube link of a B2 Bomber that doesn’t have dramatic music dubbed over the top of the clip.
Wiki says the SA-2 is command detonated. The SA-4 has contact and proximity fuses. The SA-2 was probably command detonated at altitude, the SA-4 probably self-detonated as its target was leaving its performance envelope.
**ducati **posted anecdotes from a book. He wasn’t claiming that these things happened to him.
Sorry I did not manage to take a picture, but I saw a green streak going east to west while driving to Caledonia from Rochester NY in 1982 at about 8 pm.
As I did make no effort to find said object, and I surmise it was a meteorite of some material [greenish burn, copper bearing perhaps] it was indeed an UNIDENTIFIED FLYING OBJECT of extra terrestrial origin.
UFOs are not always space ships dude…
[hijack]
There is an SR71 hanging in the lobby of the Kansas Cosmosphere in Hutchinson, Kansas. It is probably one of the most beautiful aircraft ever assembled, and it looks freaking scary when looking at it head on, even if the pilot is not wearing a gorilla mask.
[/hijack]
[extending hijack] I saw the one on the USS Intrepid in NYC. Smaller than I expected, and so totally gorgeous. You could clearly see the cuts in the nacelles made to remove the engines, and all I could think was that they’d raped that beautiful plane. (In a figurative sense, damnit. I know it’s not really rape.) How sad it is that no more will be built! [/extending hijack]
They tried giving the SR-71 toys but they had a issue:
It out ran them.
See A-12
The one on the Intrepid is an A-12.
Here’s some text on the subject, anyway.
The SR-71 is a cool airplane, and one of the few Air Force birds in service at the time that I didn’t ride in or chase. Did see one land at my base once. Story was he lost an engine about 1,000 miles out, and figured he could slow it down enough to land by the time he reached us.
The problem was fixed overnight, and the jet departed early the next morning. I was strapped in to a jet for another early morning mission, and got to watch the takeoff. About as soon as the wheels hit the well, he took it into a max climb. Damned impressive. Really wish I could have finagled a ride in that thing.