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  Chemtrail Central Forum
  Chemtrails
  Mini Sniffer

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Topic:   Mini Sniffer

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Thermit
Tech


Houston, TX
2733 posts, Jul 2000

posted 03-06-2001 08:45 PM     Click Here to See the Profile for Thermit   Visit Thermit's Homepage!   Edit/Delete Message   Reply w/Quote

This might be a way to get a Chemtrail sample...

quote:


The Mini-Sniffer was a remotely controlled, propeller-driven vehicle developed at the NASA Flight Research Center (which became the Dryden Flight Research Center, Edwards, California, in 1976) as a potential platform to sample the upper atmosphere for pollution. The vehicle, flown from 1975 to 1977, was one of the earliest attempts by NASA to develop an aircraft that could sense turbulence and measure natural and human-produced atmospheric pollutants at altitudes above 80,000 feet with a variable-load propeller that was never flight-tested.
Three Mini-Sniffer vehicles were built. The number 1 Mini-Sniffer vehicle had swept wings with a span of 18 feet and canards on the nose. It flew 12 flights with the gas-powered engine at low altitudes of around 2,500 feet. The number 1 vehicle was then modified into version number 2 by removing the canards and wing rudders and adding wing tips and tail booms. Twenty flights were made with this version, up to altitudes of 20,000 feet. The number 3 vehicle had a longer fuselage, was lighter in weight, and was powered by the non-air-breathing hydrazine engine designed by NASA’s Johnson Space Center in Houston, Texas. This version was designed to fly a 25-pound payload to an altitude of 70,000 feet for one hour or to climb to 90,000 feet and glide back. The number 3 Mini-Sniffer made one flight to 20,000 feet and was not flown again because of a hydrazine leak problem. All three versions used a pusher propeller to free the nose area for an atmospheric-sampling payload.


http://www.dfrc.nasa.gov/gallery/photo/Mini-Sniffer/HTML/index.html

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mark sky
bin Rydin


SW coast of Oregon
1089 posts, Jun 2001

posted 03-07-2001 12:29 AM     Click Here to See the Profile for mark sky     Edit/Delete Message   Reply w/Quote
What a cute little "minisnifter"

were these guys out early, dressed up for the holloween trick or treat at EdWaEds AfB?
petting the cute little sniffer (that only made 3 flights)
or did the sniffer just return from twilight zone?
i know i don't usually dress like these guys do
but perhaps i am not as smart...

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cydoniaquest
nobody

nowhere
803 posts, Aug 2000

posted 03-08-2001 04:54 PM     Click Here to See the Profile for cydoniaquest     Edit/Delete Message   Reply w/Quote
Ha,Ha....Mr sky, you crack me up!

I would say that either something hazardous is contained in the cute wittle mini-snifter

OR

Maybe it's been in something hazardous....

OR

Maybe I should read everything more thoroughly. Hydrazine fuel might explain the suits!

[Edited 1 times, lastly by cydoniaquest on 03-08-2001]

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goldrush
Senior Member

No, Calif. USA
109 posts, Sep 2000

posted 03-10-2001 12:03 AM     Click Here to See the Profile for goldrush     Edit/Delete Message   Reply w/Quote
Hydrazine is extremely flamable. I would not want to be near it without protection either. Thanks for the laugh, Thermit.

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