What kind of plane could this be?
So it's dark out right now and there was this loud-ish rumbling noise outside that I could tell was moving. It's actually been happening a lot but this time it was especially loud so I decided to see if it was a car or something sneaking around in the dark.
Lo and behold I see 4 moving orange lights with a red light blinking in the center of something. My first thoughts was, oh it's a jet but then as I continued to watch it another orange light appeared.
The only way I can think of describing it is if you've made one of those awkward paper airplanes that ends up with more rectangular than triangular wings or a 2D house without a floor.
Imagine an orange light on every point of either of those examples and a red light dead center and that's what I saw flying across the sky.
What plane is that? I live in the middle of nowhere with no major airport for hundreds of miles so if sounds like a commercial airline plane I have no clue wtf they're doing out here…
Couldn't be spooky spy plane or it would fly much higher with no lights. It is a commercial jetliner, you are seeing beacons and strobes. The last amber light was initially hidden from your viewing angle.
If no one knows what it is, that makes it a UFO. And believe me, with that description, no one will know.
That's Santa Claus, and Dweezer wired his sleigh lights wrong again. Don't stay out and gawk at him, it'll just encourage him to do something worse next time.
Airlines often have agreements with one another to co-market flights. Flights that are codeshare have two (or more) flight numbers, one for each airline participating in the codeshare. When you book one of these flights, you'll often see Operated by in your itinerary. The plane's operator determines which plane will actually be flying the route. For example, you may have booked a United flight that says "Operated by Air Canada.
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