As far as I know, nobody has gotten to the bottom of the 370 crash.Don't quite trust anything coming from "Brother 7", whoever that may be. Like I said, whatever it is, we won't hear about it if it makes the Chinese govco look bad. It took independent investigators to get to the bottom of Malaysia Airlines flight 370, govco wasn't much help at all.
Or there was a fight over the controls that the wrong guy won....IMO the profile is not consistent with a "crew suicide" theory, since there was a clear attempt to rectify the first dive.
Or there was a fight over the controls that the wrong guy won....
Ron Wanttaja
Cables from the yoke to the elevator torque tube. If one of the two main hydraulic systems are working, it's hydraulic after that.Hydraulically boosted elevators. Still cable operated.
An independent investigator found the wreckage and showed where the jet went down. Looks a whole bunch like pilot suicide writ large, as the pilot had been practicing the exact flight path on his sim that the jet went through. Nice write up in The Atlantic.As far as I know, nobody has gotten to the bottom of the 370 crash.
Or there was a fight over the controls that the wrong guy won....
An independent investigator found the wreckage and showed where the jet went down. Looks a whole bunch like pilot suicide writ large, as the pilot had been practicing the exact flight path on his sim that the jet went through. Nice write up in The Atlantic.
Here’s a tidbit, scuttlebutt that the Boeing investigative team wasn’t needed with the investigation, sent home??
Brother #7 may be on to something?
FYI: per a NTSB news brief, the NTSB, Boeing, and others just got their travel visas a day or two ago and haven't left yet. The brief stated they hope to leave for China this week.Here’s a tidbit, scuttlebutt that the Boeing investigative team wasn’t needed with the investigation, sent home??
That’s actually incorrect about the flight sim. An even better write up on Wikipedia.
From that Wikipedia page:
In 2016, a leaked American document stated that a route on the pilot's home flight simulator, which closely matched the projected flight over the Indian Ocean, was found during the FBI analysis of the flight simulator's computer hard drive.[256] This was later confirmed by the ATSB, although the agency stressed that this did not prove the pilot's involvement.[257] The find was similarly confirmed by the Malaysian government.[258]
Believe what you want, but so far there is no hard evidence of what really happened to MH370.
Nobody has found any wreckage for years, from what I can see. Someone has a hypothesis, a potentially lovely one.An independent investigator found the wreckage and showed where the jet went down. Looks a whole bunch like pilot suicide writ large, as the pilot had been practicing the exact flight path on his sim that the jet went through. Nice write up in The Atlantic.
Believe what you want, but so far there is no hard evidence of what really happened to MH370.
Wreckage to me is finding the airplane. What they found was debris washed ashore. Planes in the water.... somewhere.Nobody has found any wreckage for years, from what I can see. Someone has a hypothesis, a potentially lovely one.
Yeah totally. The idea the flight sim data was positive proof of suicide is sheer conjecture. Correlation does not equate to causation.
From what I read a while back, the captain had marital problems, and his wife or girlfriend had just moved out. There's probably more detail out there somewhere but that sums it up.I think the reasonable conclusion is that the airplane was under human control and followed a plan with the intention of disappearing. Whoever was flying the airplane turned off the transponder, climbed even higher to kill the passengers more quickly, then flew a route to avoid radar and landfall as much as possible, with the terminal phase of the flight being to head out to an untraveled part of the ocean. The likely suspect is someone who was already in the cockpit and who had flown very similar profiles on his flight simulator at home. To me the only questions are why he did what he did and exactly where the plane impacted.
I don't know that it is sufficient evidence for a conviction in a courtroom, but I'd offer 100:1 odds on it being a case of mass murder and suicide by airplane, with the pilot being the guilty party.
From what I read a while back, the captain had marital problems, and his wife or girlfriend had just moved out. There's probably more detail out there somewhere but that sums it up.
Why? The plane flew until it was out of gas. So why go to all that trouble? If you have sole control of the cockpit, why bother continuing to fly for hours when you could just drive into a mountain or plunge into the ocean?Whoever was flying the airplane turned off the transponder, climbed even higher to kill the passengers more quickly, then flew a route to avoid radar and landfall as much as possible, with the terminal phase of the flight being to head out to an untraveled part of the ocean.
An airline pilot with marital problems? What? Get out.From what I read a while back, the captain had marital problems, and his wife or girlfriend had just moved out. There's probably more detail out there somewhere but that sums it up.
Why? The plane flew until it was out of gas. So why go to all that trouble? If you have sole control of the cockpit, why bother continuing to fly for hours when you could just drive into a mountain or plunge into the ocean?
The airplane only disappeared because ATC ducked up and it wasn't reported missing for hours. He couldn't have counted on that.Because he apparently wanted the airplane to disappear, instead of cratering it into the nearest mountain and leaving proof of what he did.
The airplane only disappeared because ATC ducked up and it wasn't reported missing for hours. He couldn't have counted on that.
ATC can track a primary target. They didn't because no one was looking.He could count on ATC radars losing him after he shut down the transponder. He could also bet that nobody watching a primary (largely military) radar would pay much much attention unless the flight path threatened someone's borders/security.
Wreckage has been found washed ashore all over the Indian Ocean, which is where ether jet went down.Nobody has found any wreckage for years, from what I can see. Someone has a hypothesis, a potentially lovely one.
Transparency and the Chinese government are two mutually incompatible ideas according to the Chinese government, who closely monitors and controls what data is exported from the country.Is the silence becoming deafening?
Wreckage has been found washed ashore all over the Indian Ocean, which is where ether jet went down.
When the typical aviation accident conversant person says that the wreckage hasn’t been found, they mean the main part of the wreckage or debris field which is typically at or near the point of impact. The discovery of relatively small pieces of the aircraft or its contents that has floated an unknown distance away from the point of impact does not qualify as the wreckage being discovered.
So here’s a question: Is the main wreckage findable? If the airplane impacted hard enough to produce the fragments that washed ashore, I doubt there is a substantially whole airframe to find on the seabed. Can side scanning sonar find aluminum confetti?
Yes because the Chinese government is all about getting clicks on social mediaI I’m starting to get the feeling they’d rather meter out details sparingly, over a long timeline?
I’m starting to get the feeling they’d rather meter out details sparingly, over a long timeline?
There's a long MH370 thread on this board, and this isn't it.