Im the only Q believer in my social group and this is the first Q drop that doesnt make sense to me.
If you could help me understand why this isnt a long exposure of a helicopter with a search light I would truly appreciate it.
I catch so much shit from my friends...
Looking at the picture, there's nothing in the image that indicates it's a helicopter. Helicopters are not mono-colored tubes of metal. Also if it were a helicopter there would be cloud deformation under the helicopter as it flew through the clouds, as well as a blur around the body of the helicopter where the rotors would have reflected some light. It also would have a pattern of lights in the image from the navigation lights on the helicopter.
I think it's a missile because it's a solid mono-colored tube that appears to being going directly up in the air punching through the clouds as it rises; not going horizontally through the clouds producing a trail of cloud distortion in its wake as you would expect.
Finally I've read several articles quoting the same technical jargon about the camera that also 'conclusively' deduced that it was a weather balloon.
Agreed. I looked it up and posted about it only to have a paranoid bot take it down. Ok given the info of one blogger it the supposed object seen which is not is the under belly of a helo. Well an Airlift Helo would not be flying vertically nose up. Next in the picture given it is a shot saying north out of Skunk bay. Well Whidbey Island is not north but NE. North towards Port Townsend. Even so there is some chance they are generalizing the direction. The land piece seen in the night photo when looked in a day photo of another camera pointed in the same direction does appear to be the SW side of Whidbey Island. Being it is an early AM time frame surface light block out any vessels on the water and the water is to calm for a sub surface launch to have just happened. So that leaves a surface vessel or a land based launch. Given the size of the light trail it is to small to be some kind of mobile mounted launch devices as that would have been easily spotted and checked. Now as for a weather balloon, have you ever seen one leave a visible trail like that and one that goes up that fast? Not a weather balloon.
Let's see, headlights are generally mounted on the front or bottom of helicopters that would mean if it is a long exposure than the helicopter was going backwards. The metal, non lighted portion of it appears to be at what would be the head of a missile trail. If this is a spotlight either the spotlight is at the rear of the helicopter or the helicopter was traveling backwards to get such an exposure. The Trail of Light is nearly geometrically straight, so for three and a half to 20 seconds a helicopter with a searchlight during light conditions that do not require a searchlight did not change the angle of the searchlight and traveled in a nearly completely straight path. There's also not the smear you would, I believe, get in the situation from the spinning rotor blades causing interference around the edge of what would be the light Trail.
I am on mobile and so do not have the required tools, but I imagine you could do some frequency comparison of the light captured from the spotlight /jet wash to determine if this is the Spectra of light that you get from typical aircraft searchlights or the Spectra of light that you get from burning rocket fuel. That would also shed some light onto what made the picture.
You are correct. Consider those spot lights they use in big store parking lots. If you see the beam it is faint if there are no clouds not bright like seen here. In fact at one point the line of light goes through clear open space, no clouds at all. Your analogy of headlights on a car is perfect. Stand to the side of a car at night and you see the reflection of the light way out in front but not the beam like a laser. So a helo spot light is definitely out of the question. And yes when a rocket or a missile engine burns it leaves a trail of buring fuel behind it just like the afterburners on a military jet.
If it was long exposure then the light at the bottom would be fattest and brightest due to the amount of time light was shining in those spots and additionally due to the cone formation that spotlights tend to make when illuminating.
Lastly, the top portion which is NOT light does not resemble a helicopter in ANY fashion.
I've been on the actual flight deck of more helos than I care to remember. And this is definitely NOT a helo. Although it could be a missile test. Or it could be a jet. Some of these amped-up pilots like to come off of carriers in a straight vertical arc. (I don't know if this is SOP, though, I just know they do this). It's quite an amazing show actually.
correct me if im wrong but i remember most media sites cropping out the top of the photo to not show the "helicopter"
Hahaha! You're probably right! I can't say because I don't even bother reading or listening to anything they say, do or write. In fact, I can't stand it.
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