Watch F-15 fighter jets rip though the UK's 'Mach Loop' while making ultra low-level passes

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Watch F-15 fighter jets rip though the UK's 'Mach Loop' while making ultra low-level passes

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F-15 Eagle Wales UK Mach Loop

Elwyn Roberts/Twitter

A F-15 Eagle passing through the "Mach Loop" in Wales, February 8, 2018.

The "Mach Loop" in northwest Wales provides a perfect vantage point to watch fighter jets and other aircraft blitz through steep-sided valleys at almost eye level.

Earlier this week, amateur photographer Elwyn Roberts caught what appear to be US Air Force F-15 fighters from the 48th Fighter Wing based at RAF Lakenheath - home to the US Air Force in Europe's only F-15 fighter wing - making some thunderous passes through the Loop's snow-capped mountains.

Aviation enthusiasts and photographers flock to the area, nicknamed the Mach Loop after the town at the southern end of the circuit, Machynlleth, where roughly 1,000-meter-tall mountains make it possible for all kinds of aircraft to make low-level passes.

The Loop, officially called Low Flying Area 7, is one of several sites in the UK where aircraft can make passes at altitudes as low as 250 feet.

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Fighters and other aircraft are a regular sight.

In January, Roberts caught a pair of C-130J Hercules zipping through the circuit - their wings flexing in strong winds. In August, he filmed a trio of F-15s roaring through as observers looked on.

F-15 Eagle Mach Loop Wales UK fighter jet

Elwyn Roberts/Twitter

A F-15 Eagle passing through the Mach Loop in Wales, February 8, 2017.

The Mach Loop had several first-time encounters with US aircraft in 2017.

In April, F-22 Raptors, a stealthy 5th generation fighter that is rarely deployed overseas, were on the scene making passes through the Welsh mountains.

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That was followed in May by F-35As from Hill Air Force Base in Utah passing through for the first time while deployed to Europe.

In August, a US Air Force C-17 Globemaster III lumbered through for several low-level passes, its wings briefly trailing condensation as it raced by photographers.