One of the interesting things I noticed which seems to tie up with another phenomenon I never really bothered with is the design layout of this supposed electro-gravitic drive fitted inside the TR-3B.
Those people who claim to have seen it have counted exactly the same number of spokes which were noticed in the very first crop circles.
Over 95% of crop circles I'm positive are fake. But their relatively sudden appearance and the subsequent explosion of copy-cat instances always confused me.
I can understand people doing it as a bit of a craze. Maybe even some kind of art statement. But it strikes me as the kind of thing you'd very quickly become bored with. Who wants to tramp around a farmer's field every day with a plank of wood?
Given that they seem to be the product of a very small number of people I now suspect they are largely meant to divert people's attention. Recall that early crop circles very often left an imprint which could be seen in the next year's crop. Moreover, many people claim to have experienced weird electrical phenomena when standing at their centre.
But it's the fact that the number of spokes in these early circles appears to match precisely the number of inlaid alloy spokes reported as existing in the base of this electro-gravitic drive which interests me. It's certainly possible that a charged, rotating plasma field could interact with whatever sits below it. We know that the US routinely based many of its most advanced spy-planes in the UK (such as the U2 & the SR-71). So it's certainly possible they'd base a craft of this specification here too.