By Major Donald E. Keyhoe
(Flying Saucers
From Outer Space (Page 107))
Source: NICAP.org
“Keyhoe:
......the strange object was seen from the ground by
several civilians near Bellefontaine. It appeared to be round, with a shiny,
metallic gleam.
When the blips came on the scope, two F-86 jets were
about ten miles from the UFO, on a GCI problem. The two pilots, Major James B.
Smith and Lieutenant Donald J. Hemer, were immediately vectored toward the UFO.
As Smith and Hemer reached 30,000 feet , they saw a
bright, round, glowing object maneuvering above them. To make certain it was
not a ground reflection, both pilots changed course, circled, climbed, to view
it from different angles. The UFO’s appearance did not change. Positive it was
a solid object, both pilots switched on their gun-cameras and climbed at full
power.
At 40,000
feet the mysterious device was still above them. Pulling
up at a sharp angle, Major Smith tried to get a picture. But his F-86 stalled
and fell off. When Hemer nosed up for a camera shot, the same thing happened.
Then Major Smith, climbing again to 40,000 feet made a
second attempt. This time he was successful, and he clicked off several feet of
film before the plane stalled.
As he began the camera run, Smith’s radar gunsight had
caught the UFO for a moment. (Hemer’s radar sight was ‘caged’ - inoperative -
so he saw no radar blips.) From the range of his radar set, Major Smith knew
the unknown device must be between 12,000 and 20,000 feet above him
to cause such a weak blip.
To confirm his estimate he quickly checked with his
telescopic gunsight and found it just covered the UFO. But before he could get
a better look, the object quickly accelerated, disappearing at a tremendous
speed. Later, using the radar and optical sight data, Smith carefully
calculated the UFO’s size. If it had been 12,000 feet above him,
then it was about 24 feet
in diameter. If it was at 20,000
feet , its diameter was not less than 40 feet .”
The UFO incident occurred
near Troy , Ohio (radar at Bellefontaine), according to NICAP.org (nicap.org).
Related posts:
Hovering object scanned by radar and seen by ground
watchers, caught on film by a climbing jet pilot. These unretouched 35 mm gun - camera movie frames, released to TRUE
by the Air Force, were taken at 30,000 feet , near Wright Field, at 11 a .m. on August 1, 1952.
(text by nicap.org) (nicap.org image)
(tageo.com photo)