The Truth is Out There
A veteran reporter describes his search for the aircraft of Area 51.
- By William B. Scott
- Air & Space magazine, September 2010
Nevada’s mountains provide a wall around one of the world’s most secret places.
Courtesy KPITV; Map: USGS
(Page 3 of 4)
IN THE EARLY 1990s, when I was working from a home office in the high desert of southern California, about 45 miles from Edwards, I seemed to be at the center of spook-aircraft reports. The more stories we ran about black aircraft, the more reports we seemed to receive. Soon I was getting phone calls in the middle of the night from avid sky-watchers, urging me to “run outside and look to the north! The ‘pulser’ just flew over Mojave!” I never saw this particular aircraft, but I did hear its loud, pulsing signature a few times. In years in the flight test business, I had heard more than a few jet engines. This was something new.
Sightings were funneled my way, but other AvWeek reporters were also vetting the information. Trying to piece together dozens of observations, sketches, and a few photos, then deciphering what they meant, was like working on a 400-piece jigsaw puzzle with only 250 pieces. No matter how we shuffled the pieces, we could not be sure we had identified the full picture. Many of my sources refused to discuss black matters over the phone; their jobs and security clearances were at stake. And a law enforcement friend had confirmed that my home office phone line had a legal tap on it, from a court order in the 212 area code (New York City). I was never able to find out who had requested the tap or why. Consequently, my sources and I resorted to using codes. I’d call and ask a question such as “Are you helping with the silent auction at the kids’ school next week?” Translation: “I’ll meet you in the Gemco parking lot in 15 minutes.”
Several times my colleagues and I rented night-vision gear and set up makeshift observation sites near Edwards. Long nights of shivering in the desert, watching and listening, ultimately yielded one intriguing videotape: Our team saw and recorded what we called the “dripper,” a long, thin aircraft, cloaked in gold light, that appeared to shed luminescent clumps or pearl-like globs. I wasn’t with the team that night, but when I viewed the tape the next morning, I was just as puzzled and excited as those who had seen the dripper first-hand. I contacted physicists at the California Institute of Technology in Pasadena, who later watched the tape and decided our dripper’s shedding was “classic plasma bifurcation,” or the splitting of gas ions in the atmosphere. Fascinating, but why would an aircraft be shrouded in plasma? Was this a new type of stealth technology? If so, it must be of limited operational value, because at night, the aircraft, visible for miles, failed miserably at visual stealth.
We had data and some intriguing theories but no confirmation. However, much of what we did have seemed to point to one place: Groom Lake. It was time to join the cadre of watchers who prowled the borders of this enigmatic Mecca of advanced aircraft. In the mid-1990s, the federal government extended the borders of the restricted areas around Groom, removing almost 4,000 acres of land from public access. The base’s facilities could be seen clearly from only a few mountains and ridge lines, and the move prevented anybody climbing them. The one remaining viewing site was Tikaboo Peak, about 30 miles from the base. Those who had made the difficult climb told me they couldn’t see much of interest.
Under time and budget constraints, I opted to drive from Las Vegas and simply park just off Highway 375, northeast of Groom. The base was miles away, hidden behind rugged mountains, but that’s about as close as any outsider could get.
I had perused an old Air Force Security Police manual entitled Det 3 SP—Job Knowledge, which included rudimentary drawings and descriptions of field sensors—motion, acoustic, and other types—scattered around Groom. According to the manual, these battery-powered canisters were buried with their “flat end facing the roadway,” enabling them to detect passing vehicles and set off alarms if anybody got close to the base.
I couldn’t monitor activity at the base itself, but maybe I’d spot the sky-ripper departing for a late-night test flight. A near-full moon provided enough light to reveal an aircraft, if one were to take off that night. Hours went by, the moon climbed higher, but I saw nothing. The desert was dead quiet, and downright lonely. Around 2 a.m., fighting to stay awake, I suddenly felt the rental car rocking back and forth. I bolted upright. A short-horn steer was using the car’s left-rear corner as a scratching post. About a dozen open-range cattle were clustered around the car, probably wondering why I had intruded on their pasture.
By 4 a.m., having seen or heard nothing departing Groom, I headed for a motel. Joining me the next night was a Las Vegas TV crew that was equipped with night-vision gear and a portable radio-frequency scanner. We had barely settled in for the evening when the scanner blared: “[Call sign], do you have the four-wheeler down by the mailbox?”
“Yeah. I got him,” came a bored reply.
Across the highway from us stood a local rancher’s black, post-mounted mailbox. The four-wheeler under discussion was ours. We hadn’t been there a half-hour, and the “camo dudes”—what black-aircraft watchers call the camouflage-uniformed Groom guards— were already on to us. Maybe the presence of two reporters and a TV cameraman prompted the base’s commander to cancel that night’s tests. Or maybe Groom test pilots don’t fly on nights when the moon is full and bright. For whatever reason, we saw nothing more exciting that night than lightning flashes from a distant thunderstorm.
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Comments (5)
Brings back fond memories!
1. Do NOT ever change the name of "Sam's Place". This revered individual, pilot of a Twin Otter, gracious host with white handlebar mustache was a fine gentleman to know. He kept pre-made martini's in a pitcher in his freezer for "after work".
2. The accuracy of the article, to my recollections is quite good. Concur with the dis-information about aliens and craft from outer space. Whatever diverts time, effort and money away from the mission is a plus.
3. The early overnight quarters were pretty primitive; called Babbit Houses; don't know the origin of the name.
4. The 'scoot shelters' were actually called "Scoot-n-hides" for exactly the purposes described; overheads scheduled to fly over. NORAD was then the key to providing the data and especially if there were a new launch or orbit change.
5. This is a national asset for R&D, FME and supports not only DoD, but the entire National Intelligence Community. It it literally irreplaceable anywhere in the US; it MUST be protected which is why lethal force is authorized against trespassing.
3.
Posted by Dana on August 20,2010 | 08:17 PM
There is no alien craft at area 51. Try area 37 and 42.
Posted by Inventor on August 25,2010 | 12:02 PM
The "Sky Ripping" makes perfect sense....Aurora uses Pulse Detonation technology.It goes speeds up too Mach 20,Area 51 and the government houses another project of a Craft that as "Anti-Gravity" capabilities.Both of these crafts aren't just crafts that operate in our atmosphere,they built them to explore Space.They're new Designs in Space travel and intelligence...All new technology.
this plane does exist, its propellent is much faster, the ion winds, static electricity, controlling the atom, stripping the electrons, makes your atoms,molecules in your body be propelled instantly and stop instantly, no g-force. this technology is like, not the same as the technology that blaze labs is doing, american anti-gravity.com is trying to do and others. the only difference is the govts is much more advanced. We call them the ufo sightings.
The other plane in the "TR-3A" Anti Gravity.
Actually it's more like these planes have more than one Functioning capability.They do it all.
The US Government is 20 years ahead in technology than whats publicly introduced.
Anyone remember "Tinley park Ufo"
The TR-3A in a test run!
It was beautiful!!!!
Posted by James on September 15,2010 | 09:05 PM
I knew Anti-Grav existed ! yeah, I guess all that stuff I read about Townsend Brown in the 1940's wasn't bunk after all. How cool is that !
Posted by sc wester on October 18,2010 | 11:46 PM
Say, what about the extensive mining operation underway at the Area and the Tonopah test range, for example. Where the parent rocks and soils are loosened by detonating explosive, perhaps nuclear or equal in strength, creating the "shot"holes that the DOE has exclusive mineral rights to for many years.Anyway, the material is transported to "the box" where it undergoes chemically aided extraction processes to refine the gold and other precious metals from the matrix is was otherwise entombed in forever. The same chemicals that destroyed the lives of some of the workers there, only discovered when the wife of one such worker had a 2nd autopsy performed on him, showing the COD as something other than previously declared.
That huge alluvial fan is just rich with all kinds of accretion concentrated and transported as glacial till,material, long long ago, to be only now, exposed from its cold hard depths with the flash of the plowshare.
And I wonder what other elements or compounds are formed when a nuclear device is detonated over certain ground composition, apart from pretty green gass that sells at a pretty good price it makes it worth mimicking, for selling purposes.
Posted by kERRY EMMERSON on April 14,2011 | 09:08 AM