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Originally posted by PisTonZOR
Silly question. I am not a big military aircraft buff.
How exactly does speed influence exhaustion?
Can someone clear this up for me?
Thanks.
I've flown a 26 1/2 hour mission in a B-52 and that's as exhausting as a 4 hour mission in the SR-71.
Originally posted by GOV.PILOT08
THE AURORA IS VERY REAL. THEY TEST FLEW IT IN 1952.
Maybe it requires more intense concentration to monitor the flight, because everything happens so much faster.
Originally posted by GOV.PILOT08
THE AURORA IS VERY REAL. THEY TEST FLEW IT IN 1952.
[edit on 30/1/2007 by Mirthful Me]
Originally posted by WestPoint23
you know what would be funny if the aurora really dosent exist.
Originally posted by Ghost01
Originally posted by GOV.PILOT08
THE AURORA IS VERY REAL. THEY TEST FLEW IT IN 1952.
[edit on 30/1/2007 by Mirthful Me]
No offense, but I doubt this is correct! The Aroura is supposed to be the sucessor to the SR-71 Blackbird, which was ironically supposed to replace the U-2 Spyplane. Your date would place the first fight of Aurora 3 YEARS before the U-2 was built.
How exactly did the Blackbird's sucessor fly 3 Years before the U-2?
No offense, but your date is WAY off the mark!
Tim
Originally posted by TeslaandLyne
If the Aurora is actually a triangle UFO craft he might be right since development may have started after 1945.
One book on UFOs 1945-1995 did have a triangle UFO sited in the 40s.