UAP Gerb Knowledge Base
Events

2004 Nimitz UAP Encounter (Tic Tac)

Famed naval encounter involving a UAP described as a 'tic tac'; Ross Coulthart claimed the object originated from Lockheed Skunk Works.

Date2004

F-18 pilots including David Fravor encountered an unidentified aerial object; Greer claimed it originated from Lockheed Skunk Works

Commander David Fravor observed UAPs off the coast of San Diego; objects reportedly jammed radar and sensory equipment of Navy jets

UAP observed and analyzed by Kevin Knuth, estimated to have experienced approximately 5400 Gs of acceleration.

US Navy F-18 pilots including David Fravor encountered an unidentified craft now debated as either non-human or Skunk Works technology

US Navy FA-18F Super Hornet pilots observed a UAP hovering above roiling ocean whitewater, possibly indicating a larger submerged object below the surface.

The Tic Tac UAP descended from 28,000 ft to sea level in ~78 seconds, experiencing an estimated 5,400 Gs of force, requiring ~1,100 gigawatts of power based on conservative mass estimates.

Commander David Fravor encountered an unidentified Tic Tac-shaped object off the coast of San Diego, a widely known UAP case.

The well-known Tic Tac UAP encounter associated with the USS Nimitz, referenced as a famous case predating the 1991 USO encounter