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News Technology

The Forgotten Legend of Silicon Valley's Flying Saucer Man (bloomberg.com) 44

Reader pacopico writes: Humans have been spotting UFO-like objects for hundreds of years. But, in the late 1920s, an obscure engineer/artist named Alexander Weygers actually designed a flying saucer and later patented the craft. Bloomberg Businessweek spent two years reporting on the strange tale of Weygers, uncovering a Da Vinci type figure who lived on the outskirts of Silicon Valley in a house he built from recycled materials. Weygers was an engineer, sculptor, photographer, wood carver, tax evader and generally weird dude who lived off the land for decades. He became convinced the military stole his flying saucer design and built the vehicles, and there's some evidence he might be right. Weygers was largely forgotten until an art collector became obsessed with his story and found out everything there was to know about the guy. Overall, he's a symbol of a different, purer time in Silicon Valley.
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The Forgotten Legend of Silicon Valley's Flying Saucer Man

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  • by Locke2005 ( 849178 ) on Tuesday November 20, 2018 @03:55PM (#57675958)
    The Northrop Flying Wing (Northrop YB-49) proved many of the parts we consider necessary for heavier-than-air craft aren't really necessary. In other words, a disk _could_ function as a complete airfoil.
  • I din't know there was a Silicon Valley in the 1920's...
    Maybe it was just Sand Valley then.

  • by BringsApples ( 3418089 ) on Tuesday November 20, 2018 @04:35PM (#57676166)
    Yeah, the article looks like it was written to increase the value of this guy's art. I can sum it all up for you (yep, I read the article):

    The guy (Weygers) was born to a well-off family with lots of land. He traveled the world at an early age. He started out as a blacksmith. Studied at the very best schools in the world, as a mechanical engineer. Later he became an artist. After that he sort of meshed the two aspects of art and engineering, and that's where the flying saucer came from.

    After Weygers died, a guy stumbled upon lots of pieces of his art and bought all of it. Now, it appears, this guy's looking to let others know about Weygers' story, probably to try to make a profit from the art.
    • by goose-incarnated ( 1145029 ) on Tuesday November 20, 2018 @04:50PM (#57676226) Journal

      Yeah, the article looks like it was written to increase the value of this guy's art. I can sum it all up for you (yep, I read the article): The guy (Weygers) was born to a well-off family with lots of land. He traveled the world at an early age. He started out as a blacksmith. Studied at the very best schools in the world, as a mechanical engineer. Later he became an artist. After that he sort of meshed the two aspects of art and engineering, and that's where the flying saucer came from. After Weygers died, a guy stumbled upon lots of pieces of his art and bought all of it. Now, it appears, this guy's looking to let others know about Weygers' story, probably to try to make a profit from the art.

      "This guy" is dead, you moron. The bit about the author going to his funeral was a dead (hehe) giveaway.

  • Awesome. Bloomberg's video is a black screen
  • by onepoint ( 301486 ) on Tuesday November 20, 2018 @06:07PM (#57676628) Homepage Journal

    As a kid growing up in the 70's and 80's we still had a few of these types of guy. I recall
    learning from one old guy how to carefully stretch ( I think it was stretch ) the copper
    wires in a portable handheld radio to listen to the airplane pilots, rhymes to learn the
    stars, use a vacuum gauge to tune up a car and all sorts of non important things that
    now that I am older, I use a lot.

    gee, how to bend metal in all 3 axis was something of a trick but you learned, drill a hole
    in a rock fill it with water every day for a year, it will crack ( ice will form in the winter,
    and it will split the rock on the bore hole

    heck, powdered (not regular) sugar+vitamin E pill liquid, mix into a paste in the palm of
    your hand, slab it over a wound, heals faster and will leave no scar ( I'm proof of that,
    I have no scars even in stab wounds).

The opossum is a very sophisticated animal. It doesn't even get up until 5 or 6 PM.

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