Posted on 02/19/2009 7:02:08 AM PST by yankeedame
The CIA estimates that more than half of the UFOs reported in the 1950s and 1960s were really American spy planes. Here are six (no longer) secret aircraft that people have mistaken for extraterrestrial flying saucers.
By Phil Patton, with additional reporting by Davin Coburn, Erin McCarthy, Joe Pappalardo and Erik Sofge
Published in the March 2009 issue.
Spy and stealth planessome with bizarre, bat-shaped wings, others with triangular silhouettes that imply otherworldly designshave long generated UFO sightings and lore. And official denials feed rumors that the government isnt telling us about alien ships. The CIA estimates that over half of the UFOs reported from the 50s through the 60s were U-2 and SR-71 spy planes. At the time, the Air Force misled the public and the media to protect these Cold War programs; its possible the governments responses to current sightings of classified craftwhether manned or remotely operatedare equally evasive. The result is an ongoing source of UFO reports and conspiracy theories. Here are the Earth-built craft that likely have lit up 911 switchboards over the years.
1. RQ-3 Darkstar
Manufacturer: Lockheed Martin/Boeing
First Test Flight: 1996
Deployment: None (it was canceled in 1999)
Declassified: 1995
Size: 15 ft long; 69-ft wingspan
Performance: 288 mph (cruising speed); 45,000+ ft (max. alt.)
UFO Link: The official life span of this unmanned spy plane was brief and disappointing, with a crash and a program cancellation after just three years. But in 2003, Aviation Week reported that a similar stealth UAV was being used in Iraqfueling speculation that the government scrapped the craft publicly only to secretly resurrect it for clandestine missions.
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2. U-2
Manufacturer: Lockheed Martin
First Test Flight: 1955
Deployment: 1957 to present
Declassified: 1960
Size: 49 ft long; 80-ft wingspan
Performance: 410 mph (max. speed); 85,000 ft (max. alt.)
UFO Link: Designed for high-altitude reconnaissance, the U-2s long, gliderlike wings and silver color would have been notable to observers on the ground and in the sky. In the 1960s the airplane was painted black to avoid reflections. The U-2 is also famous for being among the first classified planes to be flown from the Air Forces secret test facility at Groom Lake, Nev.aka Area 51.
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3. SR-71 Blackbird
Manufacturer: Lockheed Martin
First Test Flight: 1964 Deployment: 1966 to 1990, 1995 to 1998
Declassified: 1964
Size: 107 ft long; 56-ft wingspan
Performance: 2432 mph (max. speed); 85,000 ft (max. alt.)
UFO Link: The tailless spy plane has an even more unusual cross section than the U-2. This Area 51 alum was briefly reactivated in the 1990s, and rumors of a followupthe now-legendary Aurora projecthave supplied both UFO believers and skeptics with a possible source of unexplained sightings.
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4. P-791
Manufacturer: Lockheed Martin
First Test Flight: 2006
Deployment: Unknown
UFO Link: Plane spotters photos and videos blew the top-secret cover off a 5-minute inaugural flight in Palmdale, Calif. The hybrid airshipit uses gas and a wing shape for liftfuels speculation that classified airships quietly roam the night skies.
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5. F-117A Nighthawk
Manufacturer: Lockheed Martin
First Test Flight: 1981
Deployment: 1983 to 2008
Declassified: 1988
Size: 107 ft long; 56-ft wingspan
UFO Link: This long-range stealth fighter, which could stay aloft indefinitely thanks to midair refueling, remained classified through much of the 1980s during test flights at Tonopah Test Field Range in Nevada, 80 miles from the legendary Area 51 Groom Lake facility. Along with the B-2 Spirit, the batlike F-117A was a perfect candidate for triangular UFO sightings.
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6. B-2 Spirit
Manufacturer: Northrop Grumman
First Test Flight: 1989
Deployment: 1997 to present
Declassified: 1988 Size: 69 ft long; 172-ft wingspan
UFO Link: Although the long-range bomber was never a true black aircraft, since it was displayed to the public approximately eight months before its first flight, an airborne B-2 is a UFO report waiting to happen. It looks like an alien craft from nearly any angle and specifically like a flying saucer when viewed head-on or in profile.
The SR-71 is an amazing plane, and her pilots are just as amazing. A few years back, I saw an interview with a Blackbird pilot. He said that in terms of demands on a pilot’s skills and endurance, a 2 hr mission in the SR-71 was equivalent to 14 or 15 hours in any other plane.
I wissed her costume was invisible and the plane real
The skunkworks guys were incredible, and they didn’t have computers, or even handheld calculators. Just amazing.
Slide rules and ingenuity. Kinda like the guys who brought apollo 13 back home.
I tell you it was flyin'! No it wasn't a bird or a military balloon. No, it was on the sand so it couldn't have been swamp gas.
Who knew that a U-2’s max speed was a mere 410 mph? Not I.
That’s a beautiful airplane. Is it yours?
Other Blackbirds:
AF museum in Dayton OH also has a XB-70 and many other aircraft and missiles. An astounding resource.
Blackbird Air park in Palmdale Ca (avenue P and 25th street east) also has F-117, A-12 (precursor to SR-71) and a nice selection of other aircraft.
The father of a close friend of mine was a design engineer with Lockheed back in the 60's. He's in his mid 80's now, still uses a slide rule and hates calculators....
The wife and I spent a day at the AF museum in Dayton a couple of years ago after we flew up for her brother's wedding and we got weathered in. You need at least a week to see everything that museum has to offer....
I wish it was
Blackbird and B-52 at Castle Air Museum in Atwater, Ca.
F-15 with Canards.
There’s also a SR-71 aboard the Intrepid Air-Space museum moored in the Hudson River.
I worked in Hollywood, CA, selling video equip in the 80’s. One of my clients was Lockheed in Burbank (the industrials used far, far more gear than the studios, at least as far as them buying it from anyone other than direct from the mfrs) Burbank = just over the hill from Hwd. Burbank then was a very cool, quirky little town, with gazillions of weird but fascinating ancillary businesses that supported Lockheed and the studios.
Once I was taken on a tour of one of Lockheeds’ design facilities. It was kind of cool, of course, but I felt bad because while I was there, every computer screen (this was the mid-80’s not the 60’s like you said in your post) was flashing “uncleared visitor” and there were probably 50 qty 80K/year engineers and geeks sitting around in cubicles unable to get any work done.
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