Neat story but I think that is what it is - a story. I read the whole thing, got to the bottom
"We tried to be a little cute. We put up a picture, and if you go to our website it's still there. If you go to our main website, [url]http://accpc.com[/url], at the bottom of the page is a nav bar with a pointer in the middle of the corporate info products, catalogue, features, tech support, Roswell 1947, help. You can go to that link and click on it and it'll take you to this special page which, of course, has now grown tremendously. It has something like, we estimate, about 9,000 messages and articles now stored within it. We started off on one Internet server and moved it to five Internet servers, and now we are on one of our super-servers which consists of four groups of four Pentium XEONs and three different service-provider carriers and a whole lot of communications just to handle the load. "
- followed the link and the Roswell part ain't there.
If you believe the history channel, the Stealth Bomber came from the German 'Flying Wing' we got as a war trophy after WWII. It was a physical specimen in the Smithsonian warehouse.
As for John Denver - oh well. But if you have an aircraft built outside of a comercial company (Boing, MD, Airbus, Lockheed, etc...) it is labled Experimental. The home built kits are classed as Experimental - my dad and I were looking at building a ZenithAir kit CH601 so I started getting into Experimental aircraft<link. Or, take a look at EAA.ORG for another reference. :wink:
Mudrat