Spaceship illustrations

By Kåre Bergheim 
10th of January 2026


Spaceship illustrations 

Six of the Pleiadian/Plejaren beam ship types which have been in use  on Earth as of 1997.  
As of 1997 only types 2, 3, and 4 were still in use on Earth. 

Below are also two real photos of two of these types as well as comments to them made by the investigator Wendelle C Stevens 

Reference: 
Auf den Tiefen des Weltenraums…Kontakte mit den Plejadiern/Pejaren (1997)  
Von  <Billy> Eduard Albert Meier
Page 245

 

Above : 
 Reference: PHOTOBUCH (2001) UFOs… Kontakte mid den Plejadiern/Plejaren s.116
Bild Nr.12 23.03.1975 17.00h
Ort: Ober-Zelg/Bettswil-Bäretswil
Urheber: <Billy> Eduard Albert Meier
Text: Strahlschiff und Aufklärer bei Demonstrationsflug bei Sonnenuntergang
Eng. Beam ship and reconnaissance ship during a demonstration flight at sunset

Below:
There is a 2nd photo in this series . The second photo shows both the beam ship and the reconnaissance ship above the horizon. 
This photo is printed in Message from the Pleiades vol 1 (1988) page 102 and is printed in black and white.
"We can see that the terrain falls sharply away from the photographer's position all the way across the valley, making any kind of rigging all but impossible, thus eliminating models." Wendelle Stevens wrote in his comments below.

 

Comments from Wendelle C Stevens the lead investigator in the Billy Meier Case.Before he retired, Stevens worked as an U.S. Air Force Lieutenant Colonel (Lt. Col.)
Among his assignments there he served as an U.S. Air Attaché in South America.
He also had experience in investigating other ufo cases

Reference: Message From The Pleiades vol 1 (1988) page 101

Quote
(Wendelle Stevens)

FLIGHT DEMONSTRATION
As previously arranged, in the 25 February contact, the extraterrestrials flew the departing old variation I ship and its Aufklarer escort past the place where Meier was working that day as they were beginning their trip back to the Pleiades where the old ship was to be retired. It had been in use for over 300 years, and it was now being superseded by a better version. Both the beamship and the reconnaissance escort have Pleiadian pilots aboard. The larger craft is 7 meters in diameter and uses a wave-stability principle that was not incorporated in the newer variation II craft. which use other more updated systems.

The smaller craft is believed to be between 3.5 and 5 meters in diameter, and is one of the several remote controlled reconnaissance variations that Meier has seen. He has photographed two different versions of different sizes. These two pictures are the only ones remaining of several taken at the time, and fortunately we have two that give us here, the two spacecraft seen one below the horizon and the other above, which allows us to compare the ships against the two different backgrounds. Light scatter measurements show that they are reflecting the same light and are nearly the same distance from the camera. They are high enough above ground level to be picking up the sun's rays while objects on the ground are in shadow.

We can see that the terrain falls sharply away from the photographer's position all the way across the valley, making any kind of rigging all but impossible, thus eliminating models. The first of these two pictures shows the two craft together above the horizon just after passing directly overhead at low level. As they fly away in a straight level line they appear to descend because they are going away from the photographer. Light scatter measurements tell us that they are larger surfaces reflecting the light in a broad band as opposed to the fine point lights one finds on the curves of models in photographs. The smaller ship fortunately is tilted at just the right angle to give us sharply reflected rays from the sun which gives us opportunities for more analysis of the surfaces of the craft and what they are made of.

The reflected sunlight and the angles of the craft above the terrain in the foreground and background. etc., combine to give us one more of the most remarkable and beautiful photographs we know of. We have tried to set up and stage some of the much simpler pictures than this, and found it all but impossible with both arms. lots of equipment, and all the help one could desire. Staging just one of these pictures is most certainly not an easy thing to do, and one who says it is simply has not tried to do it himself, and if it were possible at all, one of the more rabid critics would certainly have produced one by now. I say they can not do it.

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