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Originally posted by Tigerseye
reply to post by GhostLancer
The fact that the USAF C-17 was at the scene of the incident is very suspect for one. For what reason was it there? If it was even there at all you never know with the US government. If the USAF C-17 was there on scene, it was clearly there for a reason. What I suspect is that it was there investigating the UFO that they are trying to convince us was the planet venus. 😳 ..... Sure. I am not saying that it is entirely impossible for the pilot to have experienced a moment delusion after awakening. After all, I'm sure that's happened to all of us, waking up, overtired and confused. With the presence of the USAF C-17, it just seems like a classic case of a US military coverup. This USAF C-17 only had the entire sky to fly in, why was is there?
Originally posted by GhostLancer
reply to post by Drunkenparrot
why would a C-17 over the middle of the North Atlantic be flying with its *landing lights* on, mid-flight? Further, at night with absolutely no light pollution whatsoever, a plane's blinking red and green lights would easily identify it as... a plane. Venus has no blinking red/green lights.
Over the next minute or so, the captain adjusted the map scale on the ND in order to view the TCAS target 5 and occasionally looked out the forward windscreen to acquire the aircraft visually.
The FO initially mistook the planet Venus for an aircraft but the captain advised again that the target was at the 12 o'clock position and 1000 feet below.
The captain of ACA878 and the oncoming aircraft crew flashed their landing lights.
The FO continued to scan visually for the aircraft. When the FO saw the oncoming aircraft, the FO interpreted its position as being above and descending towards them.
Originally posted by Drunkenparrot
Originally posted by GhostLancer
reply to post by Drunkenparrot
why would a C-17 over the middle of the North Atlantic be flying with its *landing lights* on, mid-flight? Further, at night with absolutely no light pollution whatsoever, a plane's blinking red and green lights would easily identify it as... a plane. Venus has no blinking red/green lights.
Thanks for the star.
Regarding the landing lights, from the report linked in your op...
Over the next minute or so, the captain adjusted the map scale on the ND in order to view the TCAS target 5 and occasionally looked out the forward windscreen to acquire the aircraft visually.
The FO initially mistook the planet Venus for an aircraft but the captain advised again that the target was at the 12 o'clock position and 1000 feet below.
The captain of ACA878 and the oncoming aircraft crew flashed their landing lights.
The FO continued to scan visually for the aircraft. When the FO saw the oncoming aircraft, the FO interpreted its position as being above and descending towards them.
Regarding the nav lights, they are drowned out by the intensity of the much brighter landing light. Take another look at the C-17 video from 1:42, the nav lights don't resolve until the aircraft is quite close.edit on 20-4-2012 by Drunkenparrot because: syntax
The captain, who was monitoring TCAS target on the ND, observed the control column moving forward and the altimeter beginning to show a decrease in altitude. The captain immediately disconnected the autopilot and pulled back on the control column to regain altitude. It was at this time the oncoming aircraft passed beneath ACA878. The TCAS did not produce a traffic or resolution advisory.
Originally posted by entoman
GhostLancer wrote: No experienced pilot worth his salt mistakens VENUS for an oncoming aircraft.
That statement only proves that you are not an experienced pilot. I know of many embarassing cases where airline pilots have requested numerous FL changes and taken evasive action on celestial bodies such as Venus. I think you underestimate just how bright Venus can look if the conditions are right. One such case spawned a running joke at Dublin ATC, "usually we provide five miles separation but 55 million miles is a bit beyond our capability".
If you want to talk to real pilots and real ATC I suggest you head over to PPRuNe. And switching on landing lights mid air is commonplace (such as wingroot lights, as lowering the gear at FL400 cruise is not advised), sometimes nav and strobes just don't cut it. Having separate strong lights appear as one single source at some distance is pretty common (these are not car headlights, we're talking hundreds of thousands of cd's, the angular diameter of the sources themselves and their separation quickly becomes impossible to determine to the naked eye). Therefore the illusion not as illogical as you try to make it sound, and as evidenced by other pilots it's actually pretty common.
EDIT: Here's a good one, thread discussing this particular event (I hope it's okay to link to an external forum):
www.pprune.org...
Some quotes:
"I had an old friend who was a Wop/Ag on Lockheed Hudsons in 1941/2. He actually opened fire on Venus off the coast of Holland one night. He missed."
"Lots of pilots have flashed the headlights at Venus "
"Years ago I had a Spanish crew refuse takeoff clearance until the "one on final has landed" .
Bit of a wait as it was Venus..."
"I have taken avoiding action of Venus several times in the early hours fly east across the Atlantic. It rises fairly quickly, but if it has been obscured by thin cloud, when it appears, it brightens very rapidly where a short time before there was absolutely nothing. With it rapidly brightening, it gives the impression it's a landing light approaching incredibly quickly. It's very easy to be fooled into taking avoiding action by a startled, tired pilot, and yes I have done it several times! "
"When I worked a abroad a biz jet with a British crew was flying at high level eastbound one evening above a layer of CS. A fairly scared voice announced that they had a UFO in sight! My supervisor, an ex-Canberra Nav, reached for the nautical almanac and checked the times for the moon... Yes, they'd seen just the top arc above the cirrus!! "
edit on 22-4-2012 by entoman because: (no reason given)