The ship was first shown to the public in 1993. Off the Channel Islands not San Diego. I shot all the video during that day , April 9, 1993 from a helicopter.
In the PS1 game Nuclear Strike, the Sea Shadow is the Home Base for your helo. I always loved the design. Funny enough, I joined the Navy as a submariner.
The Sea Shadow is used as the capital ship of Nod's Fleet which utilizes cluster missile artillery loaded with napalm in The Dawn of the Tiberian Age, a mod for Tiberian sun. Just park 'em next to a shore-based enemy, and watch the carnage unfold.
This ship was designed, built and tested by Lockheed Sunnyvale, not the Skunk Works. Sadly, Ben Rich took the photos (see posting from the Sunnyvale photographer below) and put them in his book and labeled them "Skunk Works Photo". In fact, the Sunnyvale team found errors in the Skunk Works calculations for the F-117; errors which were responsible for a design flaw which they were then able to correct.
Do you have a concrete source for this? I'm legitimately interested in learning more, but it seems the 'posting from the Sunnyvale photographer' (at least the only comment I can find from a photographer in this comments section) that you mentioned has been edited to exclude any mention that the Sea Shadow was mislabeled as being built by Skunk Works. If you could provide a direct source, I'd really appreciate it
The ship was first shown to the public in 1993. Off the Channel Islands not San Diego. I shot all the video during that day , April 9, 1993 from a helicopter.
In the PS1 game Nuclear Strike, the Sea Shadow is the Home Base for your helo. I always loved the design. Funny enough, I joined the Navy as a submariner.
The Sea Shadow is used as the capital ship of Nod's Fleet which utilizes cluster missile artillery loaded with napalm in The Dawn of the Tiberian Age, a mod for Tiberian sun.
Just park 'em next to a shore-based enemy, and watch the carnage unfold.
This ship was designed, built and tested by Lockheed Sunnyvale, not the Skunk Works. Sadly, Ben Rich took the photos (see posting from the Sunnyvale photographer below) and put them in his book and labeled them "Skunk Works Photo". In fact, the Sunnyvale team found errors in the Skunk Works calculations for the F-117; errors which were responsible for a design flaw which they were then able to correct.
Do you have a concrete source for this? I'm legitimately interested in learning more, but it seems the 'posting from the Sunnyvale photographer' (at least the only comment I can find from a photographer in this comments section) that you mentioned has been edited to exclude any mention that the Sea Shadow was mislabeled as being built by Skunk Works. If you could provide a direct source, I'd really appreciate it
@@FartingSpider12 I was the chief engineer, then the program manager; ua-cam.com/video/qklc16OyiNE/v-deo.htmlsi=PJ2lONQgsSfniPym
0:02 VISIBLE on sonar and radar? I think you mean invisible... only 3 seconds in and you already messed up lol?
Bot read, human input.