Japan Air Lines Flight 1628 Spots
UFO Over Alaska
Location: Alaska, USA
"Japan Air Lines Flight
1628"
Loy Lawhon
Loy Lawhon
Detailed report availabel here:
http://www.mufonsanantonio.com/main/famous-ufo-case-studies
It was just a routine flight. Well, not exactly routine.... It was a special Japan Air Lines 747 cargo flight to carry a load of French wine from Paris to Tokyo. The flight plan would carry flight 1628 from Paris to Reykjavik, Iceland, across the North Atlantic and Greenland, then across Canada to Anchorage, Alaska, and finally across the Pacific to Tokyo. The crew consisted of veteran Captain Kenju Terauchi, co-pilot Takanori Tamefuji, and flight engineer Yoshio Tsukuba.
It was just a routine flight. Well, not exactly routine.... It was a special Japan Air Lines 747 cargo flight to carry a load of French wine from Paris to Tokyo. The flight plan would carry flight 1628 from Paris to Reykjavik, Iceland, across the North Atlantic and Greenland, then across Canada to Anchorage, Alaska, and finally across the Pacific to Tokyo. The crew consisted of veteran Captain Kenju Terauchi, co-pilot Takanori Tamefuji, and flight engineer Yoshio Tsukuba.
On November 16, 1986, laden with wine, JAL1628 took off from Paris and flew the
first leg of the trip, to Reykjavik. The next day, they continued, flying over
Greenland and then across northern Canada without event.
Just after they crossed into Alaska, at 5:09 PM local time, Anchorage Air
Traffic Control contacted them on the radio to report initial radar contact.
The Anchorage flight controller asked them to turn 15 degrees to the left and
head for a point known as Talkeetna on a heading of 215 degrees. They were at
35,000 feet and traveling at a ground speed of about 600 mph.
At about 5:11 PM local time, Captain Terauchi noticed the lights of some sort
of aircraft about 2000 feet below and 30 degrees to the left front of them. He
decided that the aircraft was probably an American jet fighter from nearby
Eielson or Elmendorf Air Force Bases patrolling Alaskan airspace, so he ignored
them at first. However, after a few minutes, he noticed that the lights were
keeping pace with his own aircraft, which would be an unusual thing for
patrolling jets to do.
It was about seven or so minutes since we began paying attention to the lights
(when), most unexpectedly, two spaceships stopped in front of our face,
shooting off lights. The inside cockpit shined brightly and I felt warm in the
face.
Terauchi said that it was his impression that the two objects he had seen below
them minutes before had suddenly jumped in from of him. The craft, one above
the other, kept pace with the 747 for several minutes, moving in unison with an
odd rocking motion. After about seven minutes, they changed to a side-by-side arrangement.
Terauchi said that the "amber and whitish" lights were like flames
coming out of multiple rocket exhaust ports arranged in two rectangular rows on
the craft. He felt that they fired in a particular sequence to stabilize the
craft, much like the small maneuvering thrusters on the Space Shuttle. He also
reported seeing sparks like a fire when using gasoline or carbon fuel.
Co-pilot Tamefuji described the lights as "Christmas assorted" lights
with a "salmon" color. He said: I remember red or orange, and white
landing light, just like a landing light. And weak green, ah, blinking. He also
described the lights as pulsating slowly. They became stronger, became weaker.,
became stronger, became weaker, different from strobe lights. The lights were "swinging"
in unison as if there were "very good formation flight...close" of
two aircraft side by side. He described the appearance of the lights as similar
to seeing "night flight head-on traffic", where it is only possible
to see the lights on an approaching aircraft and "we can not see the total
shape." He said, I'm sure I saw something. It was clear enough to make me
believe that there was an oncoming aircraft.
Flight engineer Tsukuba, who sat behind the copilot, did not have as good a
view of the lights. He first saw them "through the L1 window at the 11
o'clock position" and he saw "clusters of lights undulating".
These clusters were "made of two parts...shaped like windows of an
airplane". He emphasized that "the lights in front of us were
different from town lights." He described the colors as white or amber.
Tamefuji decided to call Anchorage Air Traffic Control, and for the next thirty
minutes the 747 and AARTCC were in constant contact regarding the UFO.
During this time, Captain Terauchi asked Tskububa to hand him a camera so that
he could attempt to take a photograph of the lights. However, Terauchi was
unfamiliar with the camera and could not get it to operate. Tsukuba also could
not get his camera to operate due to problems with the auto-focus and finally
gave up trying to take a photo.
At this point they began experiencing some radio interference and were asked by
Anchorage to change frequencies. Terauchi later said that Anchorage kept asking
him about clouds in the immediate area: They asked us several times if there
were clouds near our altitude. We saw thin and spotty clouds near the mountain
below us, no clouds in mid-to-upper air, and the air current was steady.
Soon after the exchanges about clouds, the objects flew off to the left.
Terauchi said later: There was a pale white flat light in the direction where
the ships flew away, moving in a line along with us, in the same direction and
same speed and at the same altitude as we were.
Terauchi decided to see whether they could see anything on the 747's own radar:
I thought it would be impossible to find anything on an aircraft radar if a
large ground radar did not show anything, but I judged the distance of the
object visually and it was not very far. I set the digital weather radar
distance to 20 (nautical) miles, radar angle to horizon (i.e., no depression
angle). There it was on the screen. A large green and round object had appeared
at 7 or 8 miles (13 km to 15 km) away, where the direction of the object was.
We reported to Anchorage center that our radar caught the object within 7 or 8
miles in the 10 o'clock position. We asked them if they could catch it on
ground radar but it did not seem they could catch it at all
At 5:25:45, after spending two minutes looking, the military radar at Elmendorf
Regional Operational Control Center also picked up something. The ROCC radar
controller reported back to the AARTCC that he was getting some "surge
primary return." By this he meant an occasional radar echo unaccompanied
by a transponder signal.
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