Intelligence Product
UFO Investigator's Field Kit
Everything you need to document, analyze, and report a UAP sighting. Templates, checklists, and methodology used by serious researchers. Stop guessing — start investigating.
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What's in the Kit
Most UFO sightings are poorly documented. The difference between a story and a case often comes down to whether the observer recorded the right details at the right time. This kit gives you the process.
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Sighting Report Template
Structured form for recording date, time, location, duration, movement, and environmental conditions.
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Classification Guide
Hynek classification system explained, plus a modern framework for categorizing what you observed.
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Photo/Video Checklist
What to capture, camera settings, reference objects, and common mistakes that ruin evidence.
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Equipment Guide
Recommended gear at every budget — binoculars, night vision, apps, tripods, and red flashlights.
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Sky-Watching Protocol
Best practices for observation sessions — when, where, and how to watch systematically.
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Reporting Channels
Where to submit your sighting — MUFON, NUFORC, AARO, and community databases.
Who This Is For
- Skywatchers who want to document sightings properly — not just point and say "I saw something"
- Amateur investigators building their own case files
- Anyone who's ever seen something unusual and wished they'd captured better evidence
- Researchers who want a standardized methodology for field observations
- Community organizers running sky-watch events
"The difference between a story and a case is documentation. Most witnesses have stories. This kit helps you build cases."
Preview: The Sighting Classification Guide
Hynek Classification System (Expanded)
Dr. J. Allen Hynek developed the original classification system for Project Blue Book. We've expanded it with modern categories that account for sensor data, transmedium movement, and multi-witness events:
- NL — Nocturnal Light: light seen at night, no structure visible
- DD — Daylight Disc: structured object observed in daylight
- RV — Radar/Visual: object confirmed by both radar and visual observation
- CE-I — Close Encounter, 1st Kind: observation within 500 feet, no interaction
- CE-II — Close Encounter, 2nd Kind: physical evidence left behind
- CE-III — Close Encounter, 3rd Kind: occupants observed
- TM — Transmedium: object observed transitioning between air and water
The full kit includes decision trees, real-world examples, and reporting templates for each classification.
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Subscribe to get first access when this field kit launches.
🔒 No-Questions Refund
If this kit doesn't deliver what it promises, email us and we'll refund immediately. No forms, no waiting, no questions.