Author Topic: Malaysian airlines 777 missing  (Read 20737 times)

Offline FLOOB

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Re: Malaysian airlines 777 missing
« Reply #450 on: April 23, 2014, 01:09:00 AM »
Well they still haven't found so much as a paint chip.
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Offline NatCigg

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Offline SysError

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Re: Malaysian airlines 777 missing
« Reply #452 on: March 07, 2019, 12:08:12 PM »
For my money, more interesting than the Amelia Earhart story.

Just read a new update/review of some of the past/present theories.


MH370: five years of theories about one of aviation's greatest mysteries

https://www.theguardian.com/world/2019/mar/07/mh370-five-years-of-theories-about-one-of-aviations-greatest-mysteries

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Offline DubiousKB

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Re: Malaysian airlines 777 missing
« Reply #453 on: March 07, 2019, 12:49:36 PM »
Very cool interview. Scary situation that was handled well in my ignorant opinion.
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Offline zack1234

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Re: Malaysian airlines 777 missing
« Reply #454 on: March 08, 2019, 12:57:26 AM »
The sea is a big place :old:
There are no pies stored in this plane overnight

                          
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Offline saggs

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Re: Malaysian airlines 777 missing
« Reply #455 on: March 08, 2019, 01:00:07 AM »
For my money, more interesting than the Amelia Earhart story.

Just read a new update/review of some of the past/present theories.


MH370: five years of theories about one of aviation's greatest mysteries

https://www.theguardian.com/world/2019/mar/07/mh370-five-years-of-theories-about-one-of-aviations-greatest-mysteries

Didn't click that article, but I have read a lot about MH370.

No mystery at all for me.  The evidence is overwhelming that it the aircraft was deliberately flown to and ditched in the southern Indian ocean.

-Turning off transponder, and deviating from planned course in between controller hand-offs.
-Hugging the Maylasia/Thailand border, in a commercial radar deadzone.
-Inmarsat ACARS pings tracing a route to the most remote place on earth.
-The lack of a large floating debris field, and the erosion to the recovered flaperon both suggest a controlled ditching.

There is also pretty strong circumstantial evidence that points to the captain as the culprit.

-The same route MH370 took saved on his home simulator.
-MH370 made a detour/turn to fly over the Captains hometown.

It's no mystery to me what happened;  Captain waits till controller hand-off so he has some time before anyone notices the situation, somehow locks out or incapacitates F.O.(could have happened before hand-off)  Turns off the transponder, goes NORDO, flies past his hometown for one last look. Then cruises out to the middle of nowhere for 7 hours till fuel runs out and ditches in the ocean.  Whether he depressurized the cabin to kill all the passengers before ditching or not... who knows, but probably.

MH370 is sitting on the bottom of the Indian Ocean somewhere mostly intact.

Offline DaveBB

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Re: Malaysian airlines 777 missing
« Reply #456 on: March 09, 2019, 06:37:52 AM »
Didn't click that article, but I have read a lot about MH370.

No mystery at all for me.  The evidence is overwhelming that it the aircraft was deliberately flown to and ditched in the southern Indian ocean.

-Turning off transponder, and deviating from planned course in between controller hand-offs.
-Hugging the Maylasia/Thailand border, in a commercial radar deadzone.
-Inmarsat ACARS pings tracing a route to the most remote place on earth.
-The lack of a large floating debris field, and the erosion to the recovered flaperon both suggest a controlled ditching.

There is also pretty strong circumstantial evidence that points to the captain as the culprit.

-The same route MH370 took saved on his home simulator.
-MH370 made a detour/turn to fly over the Captains hometown.

It's no mystery to me what happened;  Captain waits till controller hand-off so he has some time before anyone notices the situation, somehow locks out or incapacitates F.O.(could have happened before hand-off)  Turns off the transponder, goes NORDO, flies past his hometown for one last look. Then cruises out to the middle of nowhere for 7 hours till fuel runs out and ditches in the ocean.  Whether he depressurized the cabin to kill all the passengers before ditching or not... who knows, but probably.

MH370 is sitting on the bottom of the Indian Ocean somewhere mostly intact.

If he was suicidal, he wouldn't just ditch.
Currently ignoring Vraciu as he is a whoopeeed retard.

Offline Puma44

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Re: Malaysian airlines 777 missing
« Reply #457 on: March 09, 2019, 10:15:29 AM »
If the aircraft hit hard with high speed there would have been a large debris field and possibly more parts recovered.  If it ditched at a procedural approach speed, there would be far less parts separated from the aircraft, it would eventually fill with water, and sink.  If the Captain had rendered the FO incapacitated and depressurized the aircraft at altitude, there may have been no one conscious other than him (with his crew O2 mask on).

Just a thought.  Certainly a mystery for the ages. 



All gave some, Some gave all