Quite possible. God only knows what kind of wild directions technology has gone under the cover of darkness. It would be nice if we could benefit from the ridiculously expensive toys our government has made for itself.
I’ve read some similar theories about electrostatic propulsion. What I’ve seen speculated is that some type of exotic energy principle enables a passive “antigravity“ effect, like a helium balloon, whereas a conventional jet or engine (of some kind) provides raw “thrust” for rapid acceleration on top of this. Allegedly the “antigravity drive” is powered by a miniaturized nuclear reactor.
I have no idea, but:
When it got super close, you could definitely hear some kind of weird noise- and I believe that noise was being generated by whatever was powering/propelling it. Kind of a hollow, muffled droning noise- it almost reminded me of a turbojet, but not quite.
The kinds of energy signature that nuclear decay gives off would render this aircraft detectable to 1950s technology. It's gotta be something with more bang for its buck energy to weight and all. And doesn't require the massive weight of lead shielding.
Yeah, I figured they knew who I was within a couple minutes of spotting me recording them. It appeared to be black against the night sky and had a few blinking lights that formed a triangle (anti-collision lights I assume.) When it got super low I could see that there was a very faint white/blue “glow” around the entire airframe, it almost seemed sort of like an electrostatic field. It looked pretty much identical to those photos of the “high-altitude mystery jets” that were published in The Aviationist. (I attached those photos they published to this post, but the link is at https://theaviationist.com/2014/04/23/two-different-black-projects/ )
I’m glad the pilot was a cool enough guy to let me get a good look at the shiny new toy (but maybe they wanted to be ”accidentally filmed” for propaganda purposes though…considering the recent rumblings of war with Russia/Iran.)
B2 is a beautiful bird, I don’t think I’d be able to resist taking pictures of it either .
All of this is of course speculation. But I'd read it somehow has inductive coils that use energy in the atmosphere? Like the tesla free electricity thing. Thats what causes the "glow"
I have a good video of (what my friend on here told me) was probably the TR3B. It was silently hovering over a power substation, then the pilot seemed to notice me. Took off, floating directly overhead. It was low and slow enough to faintly hear some kind of bizarre sounding propulsion system or “exhaust“ signature. Although it could have been the sound of air getting displaced by the craft in flight. Idk.
Thought it was incredibly cool at the time and I have wanted to fly one ever since.
Were in the brink of WW3, so weapons testing is being pushed faster. I think we're seeing initial field testing the same as the F-117 in 1991. For 15 years prior people kept saying they were seeing UFOs around military installations in the Southwest