General statistics
List of Youtube channels
Youtube commenter search
Distinguished comments
About
DEXTER\x27S LURE LAB
Sandboxx
comments
Comments by "DEXTER\x27S LURE LAB" (@secretbassrigs) on "" video.
I can say without a doubt it's real. In 1993, I had a family member that lived in proximity to Edwards Air Force Base. For about several months, usually on a Tuesday or Wednesday afternoon, we'd hear sonic booms about twice a day. At the time, there were already news reports of unusual contrails that had a unique zipper like shape to them. Often, we could actually hear the faint burbling of jet engines in the sky above. When we would go out to check, we could see the zippered contrails and a single dark triangular shape that they emitted from. The sonic booms we're not as window shaking as those that came from the space shuttle, but a bit more subtle. We didn't mind because we were proud to see with our own eyes how advanced our air force was, and to have the bragging rights of actually being witnesses.
165
The 911 Anniversary is coming up this Sunday. Since I'm old enough to remember the coverage at the time, I remember all commercial and private air traffic being grounded for several days. WHAT DOES THIS HAVE TO DO WITH "Aurora"? Since there was no air traffic, the satellite images over the US showed clears skies devoid of the typical jet contrails. But one particular image showed a lone contrail that streaked across several states. it seemed like it was over 2/3 of the country. many speculated that was the "Aurora". IT'S WORTH CHECKING OUT!
14
It was real. We saw it several times with our own eyes about 30 miles from Edwards AFB one summer, We'd hear the more subtle sonic booms that sounded like someone dropped a hammer in an attic, then the faint burbling of the engines above us. We'd go out and look up to see a contrail that would eventually take the shape of the string of donuts a few minutes after it had passed, that are being described. We called them "zippered" contrails. All we could make out was a single triangular dark speck as it would pass above us at very high altitudes.
8
@PadAmbstar no. It was before smart phones and film cameras requiring zoom lenses were expensive. By the time the donut shapes would develop on the contrails, the aircraft would be long gone. over the horizon.
6
It's real. We witnessed it throughout the summer of 1993. Very high in the sky with, what we called "zippered", contrails. They'd come from a lone black triangular speck that moved faster than we could guess because of it's hight. The zippered parts, aka "donuts", would appear not long after the aircraft had past visual range.
6
Very justifiable today.
5
Alex missed that image of the lone jet contrail over the US during the flight moratorium in the aftermath of 911. It's speculated that lone contrail came from the "Aurora". The reasoning is mixed, from taking advantage of the clear skies devoid of air traffic to sending a clandestine message to the adversaries of the US. Also some speculate that it was a sign of reassurance to those in the know, particularly service members that could make educated guesses. Either way, all three possibilities seem to be conveyed if it truly was what is widely known as the "Aurora".
4
@rydfree I'll never forget the sonic boom it makes. I remember trying to describe it way back then and unintentionally used the same description on another thread on this video. It sounded like someone dropping a hammer on your roof.
3
@sonsofthesilentage994 Are you just another 50 cent Chicom stalking me? do you realize how ignorant your reply is under the context? why do you hate the American people so much after all they've done for China?
1
@jonathanr5238 contrails dissipate. "Riiiiiight"?
1
@albino_gringo1912 the sonic booms literally sounded like someone dropping a hammer on a roof. "Ka-thunk". The engines did sound rough, like a low pitch rumbling.
1
@m1ke176 in Palmdale CA, Ave N, next to Plant 42, used to be open to the public back then. Photographers regularly lined the fence line to take pictures of scale model SAP prototypes and the advanced Jets that regularly landed on the runway adjacent to it. For a few years they regularly tested the the hovering capabilities of the F-35 in that test range also. You could see one go up and hover for an hour or two, then another come up to take it's place as the previous one descended. It's definitely hard not to feel a sense of pride when seeing them with your own eyes.
1
@Gearparadummies 👈contradiction bot
1