The giant surveillance “blimp”, known as the “Eyes in the Sky”, and formerly known as a Tethered Aerostat Radar System (TARS), is used by U.S. border control officials to monitor ...
The Goodyear Blimp, colloquially known as "Wingfoot One," has been undergoing a transformation. The company's trademark ...
A helium-filled balloon measuring about 200 feet long and more than 60 feet wide, the TARS was located Wednesday on a ranch east of Dallas. This means the blimp was blown about 400 miles away from ...
The balloon became lodged on a power pole. U.S. farmers react to China's retaliatory tariff increase 6 Myths About High Cholesterol Dietitians Want You to Stop Believing Southwest Airlines as we ...
Back then, it was a true blimp — that is, a giant, soft balloon full of helium. Today's Goodyear blimps — the company has a trio of the airships spread across Ohio, California and Florida — are still ...
It was found Tuesday hundreds of miles away near Quinlan in Hunt County. Cell phone video shows the giant deflated balloon draped across power lines after property owners found it early Tuesday ...
A U.S. Customs and Border Protection surveillance blimp crashed into a set of power lines after it was carried over 600 miles by unexpected strong winds in Texas on Monday. The giant surveillance ...
It was found Tuesday hundreds of miles away near Quinlan in Hunt County. Cell phone video shows the giant deflated balloon draped across power lines after property owners found it early Tuesday ...