An F-16 fighter jet made a California highway patrolman's radar go bonkers with a high-speed flyby

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An F-16 fighter jet made a California highway patrolman's radar go bonkers with a high-speed flyby

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A U.S. Air Force F-16 Fighting Falcon utilizes its afterburner during the 2017 Heritage Flight Training and Certification Course at Davis-Monthan Air Force Base, Ariz., Feb. 11, 2017.
  • Video taken by Officer Chris Bol of the California Highway Patrol shows an F-16 Fighting Falcon blasting past his patrol car on an empty highway.
  • These low-altitude flybys occur regularly in this particular area and are often picked up on radar.
  • Officer Bol's radar went in and out, apparently reading 250 mph, at one point, the California Highway Patrol station in the California desert suburb of Bishop told Business Insider.

A California patrolman's radar apparently flipped out on an empty stretch of highway over the weekend, which was odd as there wasn't another car in sight, but then an F-16 Fighting Falcon came flying low and fast past his location.

A video taken by Officer Chris Bol and shared by California Highway Patrol station in the California desert suburb of Bishop shows the F-16 making a pass - not the first, as the officer filming has his camera ready to catch the fighter flying by his Ford Explorer.

The video, first noted by Popular Mechanics, was captioned: "When the radar in your patrol car is going crazy but you don't see any cars on the road, look up!"

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An F-16 can fly at speeds greater than Mach 2, more than two times the speed of sound. That means the fighter jet can hit in excess of 1,500 mph. The fighter in the video, however, was not going that fast.

These low-altitude flybys occur regularly in the area the video was taken and are often picked up on radar. One CHP officer at the Bishop station told Business Insider his radar once read out at more than 300 mph.

As for the video posted Saturday, Officer Bol's radar was going in and out, but at one point, it read 250 mph. Several F-16s flew past his spot repeatedly while he was out there.

Popular Mechanics speculates that while the video was taken in Bishop, California, the aircraft in the video may have originated from the Arizona National Guard or possibly Utah's Hill Air Force Base, although it is hard to know for sure as there are a number of air bases nearby that use the area for training.

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