Air Force Plans for Flying Saucers Revealed

The National Archives finally releases schematics from 1950s
By Neal Colgrass,  Newser Staff
Posted Oct 6, 2012 2:33 PM CDT
Air Force Plans for Flying Saucers Revealed
A "Cutaway of Aircraft Structure" from the US Air Force's Project 1794.   (National Archives)

Maybe flying saucers really do exist—but were made by the US military? For the first time, the National Archives has released schematics of a UFO-like saucer that the US Air Force was designing in the 1950s, Wired reports. The plan—called Project 1794—was to engineer a $3.1 million prototype that would reach a maximum speed “between Mach 3 and Mach 4, a ceiling of over 100,000 ft. and a maximum range with allowances of about 1,000 nautical miles,” the document reads.

So we're talking about a flying saucer that takes off and lands vertically, and travels at around 2,600 miles per hour—about a 24-minute trip from Miami to New York. And designers were optimistic, saying their plan had improved throughout contract negotiations. But the military's grand aspirations crash-landed in 1960 when they finally canned the project. "Curiously," the National Archives notes, "these pictures bear a strong resemblance to 'flying saucers' in popular science fiction films made during the years these reports were created: 1956 and 1957." (More Flying Saucer stories.)

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