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Post by ngagnon on Apr 14, 2012 15:31:06 GMT -5
This is not about a hoax but rather a IFO, an event I personally witnessed. March 27, 2012 – Strange luminescent clouds, right place at the right time. Off Route 29, Burtonsville, Maryland, I was sitting in my car facing east. At around 04:58 AM, I saw at a distance a small but bright orange light shooting straight up and I lost site of it. After another minute, a 2nd light shot up and at this time I exited my vehicle and kept an eye out for it. A third light soon followed. A few seconds later, I saw what appeared to be a small comet with a bright tail falling and shortly after the smoke trail spreaded apart and became larger and luminescent. There were three of these glowing trails. I’ve asked two other guys to see what I was seeing and they did. Research showed that these strange lights were NASA ATREX Missile Launches. There are a few vortex type “ufo” folks are capturing on vid, this may be part of this ATREX testing. Here’s a link to this test, skip to the middle and you’ll see the stuff they spraying into our skies. www.youtube.com/watch?v=qAdy_mOIOpk
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Post by carolyng on Jun 6, 2012 22:38:31 GMT -5
Scary stuff, we've got loads of chemicals in our environment.
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Post by tommy1950 on Jun 8, 2012 23:52:52 GMT -5
Almost any solid fuel rocket today consists of ammonium perchlorate and aluminum powder. It has a specific burn rate of about .3 to .5 inches per second burning from the inside out. Take a cigarette and put a hole right in through the center and lite it at the top and let it burn down through the nozzle or motor. Solid fuel rockets are used as boosters and will never acheive Earth orbit. Let's say you have a tube and it's 6" in diameter and a 1" diameter hole in the middle. That means that the web thickness of the propellant is 2.5 inches burning at .5 inches a second. That means the motor will burn for 5 seconds. It takes 8 and 1/2 minutes to reach space at 17,000 miles an hour. You may have seen a large solid rocket going through stages but didn't go into orbit. Look at the space shuttle solid rocket boosters. 2.2 million pounds of ammonium perclorate and aluminum powder. But that's just the powder. It's not a solid fuel until the powered chemicals are mixed with a liquid polymer called PBAN and then turned into a solid rubber with a curing agent and that's a solid fuel rocket with a hole right down through the center and it is lite at the top and not the bottom. There's no difference anywhere in the world with military rockets. Just look at the exhaust. If there'alot of smoke it's a splid fuel rocket. If it takes off and has a long flame with no smoke it's a liquid fuel rocket.
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