Type 2 White Fast Craft

The Flash You Were Never Supposed to See

At normal speed, these objects are invisible. Not camouflaged — just too fast. What your eye registers, if it registers anything at all, is a single flash of white light. A glint. Something your brain files as a reflection or a trick of the sun and immediately forgets.

Slow the footage down and the flash becomes an object. Solid, white, moving at speeds that turn a structured craft into a streak of light at normal playback. These are not meteors — they travel horizontally. They are not birds — nothing biological moves at these velocities. They are not lens flares — they have consistent shape, directionality, and in some cases appear alongside conventional aircraft for scale comparison.

The white fast movers are the reason this program exists. The first one was the eureka moment — a flash of light on a routine recording that turned out to be something moving through controlled airspace at speeds that shouldn't be possible. Once you know what to look for, they appear throughout the archive. They were always there. Nobody was slowing down the tape.

November 6, 2025

At the 10 second point something white appears out of nowhere and streaks off just before the commercial aircraft is about to pass under the cloud.

September 11, 2025.

At the 3 second mark two fast objects move from the bottom middle left to the right side of the frame. This was shot with the window as you can hear the wind.

This is a slowed down and cropped version of the same video. What appear to be two objects flying in a close formation.

Type 4 — Dark Fast Mover

Objects Moving Too Fast To See

These objects move at speeds that register as nothing at normal playback speed — a single frame anomaly, a shadow that wasn't there before. Slow the footage down and a compact disc-shaped object emerges, traveling at speeds that rule out any conventional propulsion system. These are the objects that answer the question this program started with: why are UAPs not being seen during the day? Because at their operating speed, your eye never has a chance.

Type 5 Black & White Craft

Two Sides of the Same Object

These objects present a distinctive visual signature — a light side and a dark side, visible as they rotate during transit. At normal speed they can be mistaken for birds, particularly raptors with dark backs and light underbellies. The resemblance is close enough that every Type 5 candidate goes through biological discrimination analysis before entering the registry.

What separates them from birds is the math. Speed, trajectory linearity, and behavioral characteristics that no biological flier produces. Birds glide, bank, adjust. These objects maintain rigid linear trajectories while rotating around their longitudinal axis. The black-and-white alternation isn't a color pattern — it's a structural feature being revealed by rotation, the same way a coin flipped in sunlight alternates between bright and dark as its faces catch the light.

In some captures, Type 5 objects appear in pairs or small groups, maintaining fixed separation distances during transit. That's formation behavior — coordinated movement that implies either communication between objects or control by a common source. Birds flock. These don't flock. They fly in geometry.

November 6, 2025

This is a slowed down version of what appears to be a Type 5 or Type 8 Stick UAP. You will notice the opposite colors as it tumbles through the frame.

Type 6 — Fast White Object

The fastest objects in the archive. These appear in one to three frames only — a flash of light at normal speed that reveals a structured object when frozen. Speeds exceed 40,000 pixels per second. Trajectory linearity consistently above R²=0.999. These are not insects, not birds, not sensor artifacts. The math confirms it.

September 11

This is an interesting one. This object appears to appear out of nowhere and speed off as if it is was already in motion. Pay attention to the middle of the screen at the 3 to 4 second point.

Type 7 Plasma Field Craft

Hidden in Plain Sight

If any type earns the title of this page, it's Type 7. These objects appear to be surrounded by a luminous field — a white, plasma-like envelope that makes them nearly invisible against clouds or bright sky. They don't move as fast as the Type 2 or Type 6 objects. They don't need to. Their camouflage isn't speed. It's light.

At normal playback, a Type 7 crossing a cloud deck is almost indistinguishable from a slightly brighter patch of cloud. Your eye slides right over it. Slow the footage down and the object separates from the background — a defined shape moving with purpose through an environment designed to hide it.

The plasma-like field radiating from these objects is one of the most visually striking features in the archive. It doesn't behave like reflected sunlight or atmospheric scattering. It appears to emanate from the object itself — a self-generated luminous envelope that matches the brightness of whatever sky it's moving through.

Whether this is an actual plasma, an optical effect of propulsion, or something else entirely remains an open question. What isn't open is that these objects exist, they move with controlled trajectories, and they are wrapped in something that makes them almost perfectly camouflaged against a daytime sky.

They are, quite literally, hiding in plain sight.

This is an even more slowed down version cropped in to show the static or plasma that appears to radiate from the object.

November 28, 2025

This is a slowed down version of a Type 7. It appears to shoot out of the clouds and leave in an upward trajectory.

Type 8 The “Stick” UAP

Elongated dark bodies captured at extreme speed, exhibiting rotation that produces dramatic aspect ratio changes frame to frame — from 3.40 to 0.45 in a single transit. These objects are rigid, structured, and spinning. The rotation is not tumbling debris. It is consistent and measurable, producing a predictable silhouette change as the object's long axis rotates relative to the camera. Some captures show a forward structural protrusion and a photometric halo surrounding the body. Speed ghosting — where a single object appears in multiple positions within one frame — confirms velocities beyond any known aircraft. This type is unique to this program. No other observer has cataloged them. The morphological profile is consistent with the aspect ratio of the interstellar object 1I/ʻOumuamua. Concentrated heavily in November, present in September and December. Their seasonal pattern suggests this is not random — something is using this corridor on a schedule.

November 6, 2025

This craft is moving so incredibly fast that it is leaving ghost images in its wake.

Slowing this craft down shows that it is not all in one piece.

November 6, 2025

At speed against a blue sky makes this fast object practically invisible to the naked eye.

A slowed down video showing more detail while the object is tumbling.

November 6, 2025

Another Stick UAP slowed down and cropped for a closer look.

Same as above but not as slowed down.

September 4, 2025

This Stick UAP video is another slowed down and cropped.

December 30, 2025

This Stick UAP can be seen tumbling just on top of the clouds as it tumbles across the sky.

December 30, 2025

A blink and you miss it Stick UAP against the grey clouds.

More Coming Soon

We have several different types of UAP that have been captured on video. These craft can be distinguished from each other so are easily filed into types. There are an original 6 types but that has grown to 8 types with one group maybe being moved into two separate or subgroup. We will be working on this page to load up 5 to 10 videos for each type. This is only the beginning.