The National Archives has recently published never-before-seen schematics and details of a 1950s military venture, called Project 1794, which aimed to build a supersonic flying saucer.
The newly declassified materials show the U.S. Air Force had a contract with a now-defunct Canadian company to build an aircraft unlike anything seen before. Project 1794 got as far as the initial rounds of product development and into prototype design. In a memo dating from 1956 the results from pre-prototype testing are summarized and reveal exactly what the developers had hoped to create.
The saucer was supposed to reach a top speed of "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," according to the document.
So was it true that some of the most difficult to explain sightings might have been Project 1794 in action? While the air force released some footage of saucer-like aircraft from the period years ago, the performance of the vehicles depicted was laughable. They could hover maybe six feet off the ground and were highly unstable. However, the declassified plans do not appear to be those for any of the silly saucers that the Air Force was previously willing to reveal. Perhaps the plans are for a different prototype altogether that flew far better and faster, and which a few people managed to observe during test flights.
If so, what probably ended the project was the same thing that sank the original Northrup YB-49 flying wing bomber - instability in the air. Northrup-Grumman finally built the flying wing bomber in the 1980's that is currently in service as the B-2 Spirit, but what made it practical was rise of computer-controlled avionics that allow the plane to make tiny adjustments to its control surfaces faster than a human pilot ever could. Such avionics would be even more necessary for a saucer vehicle lacking control surfaces and attempting to maneuver in the air using only ducted fans or similar technologies as the plans seem to indicate.
Origin: space-wanderers.blogspot.com