You "don't need to be there to experience it"? Wow. Not sure how you can experience something without being there. And I'm no scientist, but from what I can recall, you either break the sound barrier or you don't. Kind of like being half pregnant.
wasnt a full sonic boom, and i dont need to be there either to experience it. pilots arent supposed to break the sound barrier at airshows, and had the pilot done so, he wouldve had to immeditaly knock off the demo and land. it could have been a mini-boom, which happens on rare occasions and is mistaken for a sonic boom. youtube "semperapollo", he has some footage with an example of one
Were you there? No? Then stfu. It's hard to mistake a friggin sonic boom. I'd love to see you call that 25 year Air Force veteran (who has seen combat and heard many sound barriers being broken) a retard.
I know what I heard. It's not exactly an easy thing to mis-hear. lol. I know it's not allowed, but that doesn't change the fact that it happened. I'm finished trying to "prove" what we all heard. If you don't believe me, fine. It doesn't take that unforgettable moment away from me or the veterans I was watching the show with.
There is a Mythbusters video you should check out titled "Mythbusters sonic boom sound off". They performed five sonic boom passes in a F/A-18 at a mere 200 ft above a test area full of all different types of glass (home, auto, flimsy wine glasses, etc.,) and only one piece of single pane house glass broke, on the fifth and final sonic boom pass. All directly above a full camera crew and cast member nonetheless. They aren't as dangerous as you imply.
And as far as your "bleeding ears" comment, there are videos of supersonic flybys extremely close to military personnel and they seemed just fine afterwards.
Trust me guy. It happened. I was attending this air show with a 25 year Air Force veteran and when it happened (it is not heard in this video), we both looked at each other, shook our heads, and he said "I'd love to hear him explain that one." If you were there, you definitely heard it. I've lived next to this AFB my entire life, witnessed countless air shows, and believe me, that was a very distinct sound and moment I'll never forget.
this was the best performance of the day.
spiderrock2009 2 years ago
You "don't need to be there to experience it"? Wow. Not sure how you can experience something without being there. And I'm no scientist, but from what I can recall, you either break the sound barrier or you don't. Kind of like being half pregnant.
MarkGarrison 2 years ago
wasnt a full sonic boom, and i dont need to be there either to experience it. pilots arent supposed to break the sound barrier at airshows, and had the pilot done so, he wouldve had to immeditaly knock off the demo and land. it could have been a mini-boom, which happens on rare occasions and is mistaken for a sonic boom. youtube "semperapollo", he has some footage with an example of one
magnumaov 2 years ago
Were you there? No? Then stfu. It's hard to mistake a friggin sonic boom. I'd love to see you call that 25 year Air Force veteran (who has seen combat and heard many sound barriers being broken) a retard.
MarkGarrison 2 years ago
You may think it was a high-speed pass, but you are just retarded.
allthatiswithinme 2 years ago
I know what I heard. It's not exactly an easy thing to mis-hear. lol. I know it's not allowed, but that doesn't change the fact that it happened. I'm finished trying to "prove" what we all heard. If you don't believe me, fine. It doesn't take that unforgettable moment away from me or the veterans I was watching the show with.
MarkGarrison 2 years ago
Definitely not sonic booms. It's illegal in public places (exceptions may apply at certain AF bases such as EDW).
allthatiswithinme 2 years ago
There is a Mythbusters video you should check out titled "Mythbusters sonic boom sound off". They performed five sonic boom passes in a F/A-18 at a mere 200 ft above a test area full of all different types of glass (home, auto, flimsy wine glasses, etc.,) and only one piece of single pane house glass broke, on the fifth and final sonic boom pass. All directly above a full camera crew and cast member nonetheless. They aren't as dangerous as you imply.
MarkGarrison 2 years ago
And as far as your "bleeding ears" comment, there are videos of supersonic flybys extremely close to military personnel and they seemed just fine afterwards.
MarkGarrison 2 years ago
Trust me guy. It happened. I was attending this air show with a 25 year Air Force veteran and when it happened (it is not heard in this video), we both looked at each other, shook our heads, and he said "I'd love to hear him explain that one." If you were there, you definitely heard it. I've lived next to this AFB my entire life, witnessed countless air shows, and believe me, that was a very distinct sound and moment I'll never forget.
MarkGarrison 2 years ago