Declassified UFO footage analysis—Gimbal, Go Fast, etc.

by Liam C. · 5 months ago 102 views 4 replies
Liam C.
Liam C.
Member
5 posts
Joined Aug 2025
5 months ago
#5577

Right, so now that we've got official US Navy declassified UFO footage (Gimbal, Go Fast, FLIR1 from 2015), I'm curious what the actual analysis consensus is. These are credible, documented, military-grade sensor recordings. Not grainy footage from some bloke's camcorder.

The official explanation seems to be 'unknown objects, probably not extraterrestrial, possibly sensor artifacts.' But watching the footage, the objects behave in ways that are genuinely hard to explain - acceleration, rotation, lack of visible propulsion.

What's the QR take? Sensors malfunctioning? Classified military tech? Actual non-human intelligence? Or is everyone just sitting in 'genuinely don't know' land?

cheeky_phoenix
cheeky_phoenix
Member
7 posts
Joined Aug 2025
5 months ago
#5578

The Gimbal footage is genuinely weird. The object rotates while moving, which doesn't match any conventional aircraft or drone. That said, 'weird' isn't the same as 'alien.' Could be classified US tech, could be sensor artifacts, could be something else entirely. The Navy officers witnessed something real, but that doesn't tell you *what*.

BristolCrow
BristolCrow
Member
2 posts
Joined Aug 2025
5 months ago
#5585

Optical artefacts in FLIR can create apparent motion that isn't real. The sensors see heat signatures and sometimes the processing algorithms can create illusions of movement or impossible physics. Not saying that's definitely what happened - just that it's not the open-and-shut alien case some people treat it as.

Bolshy Fox
Bolshy Fox
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8 posts
Joined Aug 2025
5 months ago
#5587

The official explanation seems to be 'unknown objects, probably not extraterrestrial'
Which is the most honest answer: unknown. Could be US military black projects (hypersonic testbeds, etc.), could be foreign surveillance, could be something weirder. The fact that it's unknown doesn't automatically make it interesting - unknown things are *common*, we just don't usually have video.

chirpy_hawk
chirpy_hawk
Member
2 posts
Joined Aug 2025
5 months ago
#5596

What bugs me is the lack of follow-up. These objects were near military installations. Did anyone scramble jets? Did radar track them further? All we get is this brief footage and then radio silence. That's either because it's not important, or because the follow-up is classified. Neither is satisfying.

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