Before I retired, I was a helicopter pilot for 40. 21 Army and instructed the NVGs. I was lots of strange things in the sky I can’t explain. Best guess, satellite
Great video. They do not look like satellites. Satellites normally move from west to east. These ones are moving in opposite directions. There are too little retrograde satellites, but it is highly improbable to see them in the same night. My conclusion is that some of them are not satellites.
awesome finding, thanks for sharing. I 've been thinking of leaving a camera (wyze) to record any motion in the sky at night... but never thought about using one with night vision. my question is, do you know of a good camera for this purpose? where I live the sun hits very hard, so I guess it needs to be automated to point down at day so the lens are not damaged.
You could go for the NV8160 which you can hook up to a laptop to record all night via USB cable. The onboard recording capability only allows for 2,5 hours of video (32GB sd card). Don't worry about the lens and sunlight, it's digital not analogue night vision.
@@starsandnightvision i thought the sun of the mexican desert would burn the electronics and lens but you may be right... so the nv8160 it's russian right? from suntek... that's where I found it. it's also on Amazon Japan but the brands are all different haha