Steve Wright <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:


No its not a Harrier I think there called AV8b's over there this was very
different and made no noise, its just a large flying triangle theres no
other way to describe it.  My aircraft recognition is very good as I was top
of my class at it in Germany where we had the pleasure of lots of USAF
aircraft visiting us.

Steve


-----Original Message-----
From: Sue Hartigan <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Date: Tuesday, April 28, 1998 10:23 PM
Subject: Re: L&I 24,000mph UFO buzzes Britain. Daily Mail April 24th, 1998.


>Sue Hartigan <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
>
>
>Hi Steve:
>
>I'm always being drug to air shows by my husband, and have see the plane
>which you are talking about.  But it isn't that big.  It's a military
>aircraft of some sort (Len being a pilot probably knows the name).
>
>It can stay in one spot and hover, go straight up and down, both
>vertically and horizontally, and of course fly straight ahead.
>
>But the one you spoke of at the beginning, at 900 feet, is exactly the
>length of the Titanic!!!!
>
>Sue
>>
>> If you have a nuclear powered aircraft, which can deduce the effects of
>> gravity and drag then you have moved the major obstacles that limit the
size
>> of most conventional aircraft, I have seen it silently hover and rotate
on
>> it own axis, so I would doubt that vertical take off and landing is
possible
>> with little effort.
>> My only thought is it must have a enormous hanger, and what would happen
if
>> it got hit by lightening?
>>
>> Steve
>
>--
>Two rules in life:
>
>1.  Don't tell people everything you know.
>2.
>
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