It looks like you're using an Ad Blocker.
Please white-list or disable AboveTopSecret.com in your ad-blocking tool.
Thank you.
Some features of ATS will be disabled while you continue to use an ad-blocker.
Originally posted by Ox
Ok.. I'm all for the exsistence of Aurora.. believe me I would love to see it and know that it is real.. But I have to pose this question after reading this thread..
Is it possible that "Aurora" is the name for a series of projects? Not just one individual project?
Originally posted by Canada_EH
or is it possible that this thread is a giant Ad for a model. waste of freakin time and i hope the mods lock the freakin thing.
Originally posted by Canada_EH
or is it possible that this thread is a giant Ad for a model. waste of freakin time and i hope the mods lock the freakin thing.
Originally posted by looofo
Seems this guy got his info from the FAS page
Originally posted by Murcielago
Mods should ban this guy.
Originally posted by Shugo
your pictures mean 0 to the research of the aircraft.
Originally posted by Orionblamblam
Considering that they're as accurate as anything else out there...
My model is a sort of compilation of a number of various seriosuly-studied hypersonic aircraft concepts.
Ah, well. I guess doing actual research and presenting one product of that research... is irrelevant.
Originally posted by Shugo
would you mind not tripple post as well, it's rather annoying to flip through your three posts.
Originally posted by Shugo
you also aren't giving any specifications on the matter, just pictures, and design. Which almost anyone who's checked on Aurora knows about already and probably no longer cares about.
Ah, well. I guess doing actual research and presenting one product of that research... is irrelevant.
Originally posted by Shugo
That's right...
this all led to the retirement of the SR-71's in the mid 1990's. Could the Aurora be the successor and the cause of supersonic booms in the southwest United States, that people have been hearing about?
Continually growing evidence suggests that the answer to this question is yes. Perhaps the most well-known event which provides evidence of such a craft's existence is the sighting of a triangular plane over the North Sea in August 1989 by oil-exploration engineer Chris Gibson. As well as the famous "skyquakes" heard over Los Angeles since the early 1990s, found to be heading for the secret Groom Lake installation in the Nevada desert, numerous other facts provide an understanding of how the aircraft's technology works. Rumored to exist but routinely denied by U.S. officials, the name of this aircraft is Aurora.
Aurora is the popular name for a hypothesised American reconnaissance aircraft, believed by some to be capable of hypersonic flight at speeds of Mach 6-20. According to the hypothesis, the Aurora was developed in the 1980s or 1990s as a replacement for the aging and expensive SR-71 Blackbird.
Originally posted by Shugo
Why don't people use the search button?
I swear more and more with the new people on the board, they take little time to figure all optional uses of operations.
I believe you can find the Aurora Research project at www.abovetopsecret.com...
Apparently it has been reopened, but I'm not aware, as I seem to not be classed as any form to be notified of updates with ATS or even my own research projects.
Originally posted by looofo
Seems this guy got his info from the FAS page link to aurora info
There is also a model.
Originally posted by Estragon
"the US military had the F117A for 20 years before anyone knew it exisisted so i expect it will be some time before they announce the aurora."
Are we sure of this? Insofar as one can believe anything one reads the f-117a.com Timelines suggest a very different picture: perhaps 6 years from first flight to public and open acknowledgement.
And Aurora stories tend to focus on complete, flying, machines not drawings, designs or scale mock-up's.
Also, of course, the F-117 actually exists.