Airplanedoc
Well-Known Member
This is interesting.
http://keithledgerwood.tumblr.com/p...ysian-airlines-370-disappear-using-sia68-sq68
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That is a very interesting theory
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This is interesting.
http://keithledgerwood.tumblr.com/p...ysian-airlines-370-disappear-using-sia68-sq68
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A major hole is how/why the flight data recorder and transponder were shut off at different times.
Though, 45,000 may kill everyone who doesn't have a oxygen mask on.
Can a pilot prevent oxygen masks from deploying?
My guess is that it lost cabin pressure, drifted for a while with everyone asleep, and finally went into the water 500 miles south of India. If it crashed nose down, the debris field could be isolated to a small area, and mostly underwater.
If it wasn't for the course change and transponder disconnect, explosive decompression would be more plausible.
No evidence points to someone knowledgeable at the console (other than the pilots of the flight) after the transponder was shut off.
I gladly take you up on the bet. You are on. $100 bucks to you if the two men are shown to have been involved in causing this. $100 bucks to me they are not. If nothing gets resolved in a year the bet's off.
(Shaking on it)
This is interesting.
http://keithledgerwood.tumblr.com/p...ysian-airlines-370-disappear-using-sia68-sq68
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Now two young Iranian men traveling with stolen passports? Yes, that's pretty darn suspicious.
Really?
2 young, untrained Iranian men overpowered the flight crew and 250 passengers, and skillfully piloted a 777 for several hours while flawlessly avoiding multiple ground-based radar systems, then successfully landed at some secret unknown airfield with a runway long enough to land a widebody jet airliner? And nobody noticed?
THAT seems like the most likely explanation to you?
My money is on a gradual, undetected loss of cabin pressure that incapacitated the crew via hypoxia, causing them to become confused, alter their course, accidentally turn off their transponder, and aim the plane out over the Indian ocean before eventually losing consciousness. The plane cruised on a heading-and-altitude hold autopilot setting until it ran out of fuel and crashed in the ocean. It wasn't seen on any radar because a) they turned off their transponder, and b) it was way out over the ocean where there are no radar stations to pick it up.
Amazing. Even if he is not right in the sense that it locates the flight or even tells what happened, the idea that he has revealed that one 777 can fly in the shadow of another 777 is terrifying. This is one smart guy though and he should be acknowledged for his theory, right or wrong.
The timeline simply doesn't support something gradual. At 1:19am the co-pilot said "all right, good night." The transponder was shut off at 1:21am - just TWO MINUTES later. The next ACARS report was supposed to get sent out at 1:37am and that system was shut off as well, sometime between 1:07am (its last successful report) and 1:37 am.
Nothing about that timeline says "gradual".
edit: from the link above, the plane disappeared from Thai military radar at 1:22 when the transponder was shut off. They picked it up again just six minutes later - heading in nearly the opposite direction. I think we can throw "gradual" out the window now.
Where did you hear that the flight data recorder was shut off?
Who said they were untrained? One of them was 29 years old. How do you know what he's been doing the last 10 years? Did you look into his background?
However, I agree that landing the plane seems a little implausible.
"Flawlessly" avoiding multiple ground based radar? It was picked up by Malaysian military radar after the plane turned west and crossed the peninsula. Can you detail the other radar systems that it "flawlessly" avoided? Or can you admit that you're just making **** up now?
Law enforcement agencies are scouring the histories of both pilots, and so far haven't come up with anything particularly damning, so I think it's unlikely that this was a deliberate action by one or more of the pilots.
. At 1:19am the co-pilot said "all right, good night."
But of course, with a co-pilot and engineer in the cockpit, it does seem unlikely that pilot suicide could occur without him taking out the co-pilot and engineer quickly; which IMO is just stuff out of the movies...
Here's a Pilot's guess/opinion on what happened.
http://www.wired.com/autopia/2014/03/mh370-electrical-fire/
I don't know. I think that in case of fire someone would have been able to send a radio distress. It would take like 5 seconds.
Here's a Pilot's guess/opinion on what happened.
http://www.wired.com/autopia/2014/03/mh370-electrical-fire/
That is a very interesting theory, but the latest information I have been hearing is that the plane had already made the turn before the last ACARS transmission at 1:07 and the last voice transmission 12 minutes later. It seems that if they had turned towards the nearest runway due to fire, the voice transmission might have included something about that.
That is a very interesting theory, but the latest information I have been hearing is that the plane had already made the turn before the last ACARS transmission at 1:07 and the last voice transmission 12 minutes later.