Missing from radar screen - One Boeing 777

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You have all probably read or heard this but here, from the BBC website, it says the same on Sky website too.

Data claims
In an echo of claims made in the
Wall Street Journal earlier on Thursday that the plane transmitted engine data for hours after the plane disappeared, US officials briefed on the search told Associated Press that Boeing systems on the plane also sent signals to a satellite for four hours after the aircraft went missing.

The Boeing 777-200 was not transmitting data to the satellite, but was instead sending out a signal to establish contact, said the official, who was not named.

If true, it could suggest the aircraft was still flying.

Boeing offers a satellite service that can receive a stream of data during flight on how the aircraft is functioning. Malaysia Airlines did not subscribe to that service, but the plane was still automatically sending pings to the satellite, the official said.
That led searchers to believe the plane could have flown more than 1,600 km (1,000 miles) beyond its last confirmed radar sighting, the official said. The plane had enough fuel to fly about four more hours, he said.

Meanwhile two American officials have told ABC news that two on-board communication systems stopped transmitting data at different times, possibly indicating that the plane did not suffer catastrophic failure.


I think if this is true and it did fly on, it has more than likely run out of fuel and crashed somewhere else
 

asterix

Comrade Member
Location
Limoges or York
Yeah, but what do 'pings' tell you? Maybe only a battery going flat would stop them. Regardless of the position or state of the rest of the aircraft.

How many other airlines do not subscribe to Boeing's service? Why not, would it reveal poor engine maintenance?

Why don't aircraft have epirbs or if they do, why don't they work?

Going to a BBQ with my pilot cousin tomorrow (ex RAF combat pilot/squadron leader, ex civil airline pilot, currently aviation security consultant, aviation, his passion). I'd guess he will be very scathing about the way things have gone.
 
The statement says further down that the pings stop if there is a catastrophic event only (its on the website by a Boeing engineer) also the BBC have just stated, there is a strong possibility the plane has actually landed, lets just look at the facts we have now.

Transponder must have been turned off.(if it did carry on for 4 hours)
No debris found in the area it is said to have first crashed.
Signals from aircraft heard for 4 extra hours.
Jet turned towards Indian ocean
Mobile phones rang for a few seconds then went off.
No distress calls at all.
The USA have mentioned the passengers could be hostages?
The BBC have just announced it may have actually landed?
And still no crash site.

These are actual facts coming from experts I for one hope it did land and all are alive, but on the other hand we will all have to see if something has happened and it has flown out into the Indian ocean and finally crashed.
 

CopperBrompton

Bicycle: a means of transport between cake-stops
Location
London
Lets look at it logically, if it had exploded mid flight, there would be a massive debris field that they could find
You know how big the Indian Ocean is, right?

It took five days to find any debris from AF447, and fully two years to find the flight recorder.
 

glasgowcyclist

Charming but somewhat feckless
Location
Scotland
...

These are actual facts coming from experts...

There's a link on the BBC News site covering this called "What we know".

Here's what it says:

"A Malaysia Airlines flight from Kuala Lumpur to Beijing went missing late on Friday, with 239 passengers and crew on board.
But that, so far, is all anyone knows for sure about flight MH370."

Everything else is unconfirmed, inconclusive, or plain fantasy.

GC
 
It was where the moon landing was faked - they needed to hide the evidence first.


Roswell..........:blink:.............:thumbsup:
 

classic33

Leg End Member
There's a link on the BBC News site covering this called "What we know".

Here's what it says:

"A Malaysia Airlines flight from Kuala Lumpur to Beijing went missing late on Friday, with 239 passengers and crew on board.
But that, so far, is all anyone knows for sure about flight MH370."

Everything else is unconfirmed, inconclusive, or plain fantasy.

GC
Similar links on ABC & CNN.
 
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