Malaysia Airlines Flight 370

FloridaPilot

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I don't know about you but I find it to be a darn shame that they haven't found ANY trace of the plane as of yet. If I had family on board I would want answers. I don't know if you ever had loved ones missing in your life but it's an unsettling feeling. My thoughts and prayers goes out to the families and the people that are missing.
 
It's probably on par with scanning the whole state of Florida with a single metal detector. Might be awhile.

dtuuri
 
They haven't found Amelia Earhart's plane yet, and they've been looking for it for almost 80 years.
 
I heard they might be close. I know very little about what is true or not but I saw a news story about them finding some make-up and other items of interest on an island along with a radar image of what appeared to be landing gear under the water.

http://news.discovery.com/history/us-history/amelia-earhart-beauty-case-120713.htm
People have said they thought they were close many times before. I'll believe it when I see it. Same for MH370 -- might be next week, might be next month, might be next year, might be 22nd century -- no way to foresee.
 
The advantage here is technology and still clean edges. They found AF-447....
 
my hopes of them being in one piece, living in a pressurized plane at the bottom of the sea living off airplane bottles of booze and salted peanuts is quickly fading.

the families need some closure fer cryin out loud.
 
my hopes of them being in one piece, living in a pressurized plane at the bottom of the sea living off airplane bottles of booze and salted peanuts is quickly fading.

the families need some closure fer cryin out loud.


That is exactly right:

If you ever had a family member missing, (Especially someone you were close to) You will look forever to try and find that person or find out what really happened. Everyday you wake up and believe that today will be the day. It's a bit on the delusional side I know especially if there is an airplane and ocean involved but you will always have in the back of your mind....maybe, just maybe!
 
It took 73 years to find the Titanic and they pretty much knew where it went down. Why do so many people have this misconception that finding an infinitesimally tiny airliner at the bottom of infinitely immense ocean (because that's what it is out there) should be so easy? :dunno:

I can understand the anguish of losing loved ones but when anger is directed at those trying to find them due to lack of results they lose my sympathy.
 
They haven't found Amelia Earhart's plane yet, and they've been looking for it for almost 80 years.


It sucks that I had to Google who she was:


She seemed like an amazing person, I will read up on her further!
 
AVweb has published a story about deleted files on the Captain's sim where the flight(s) terminated on some island in the South Indian Ocean.

http://www.avweb.com/avwebflash/news/MH370-Captain-Now-Chief-Suspect222205-1.html



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Wow this is pretty crazy. I thought the deleted files lead would go no where when they talked about it a few months ago.

I thought "well that means nothing. I delete flight out of the logbook all the time on FSX".

But if it is to an island that is kinda freaky.
 
It sucks that I had to Google who she was:


She seemed like an amazing person, I will read up on her further!

I think you may have just made everyone on this board fee a little older. LOL
 
No kidding. I was astounded at that post.
We were young once, too, and didn't know who she was. And I'll never forget when my then-young-teen niece asked me quite seriously some years back (late 70's/early 80's) whether Paul McCartney had been in another band before Wings.
 
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I think you may have just made everyone on this board fee a little older. LOL

Not just a little….

I like to practice landings at the airport she started her 'round the world flight from (KOAK).

You can even see the hotel she stayed at. It's spitting distance from the 28R threshold (now, it's the CAP Sq 188 building).
 
A few hundred years ago people loosing touch with others forever was not all so uncommon. People moved on. The whole business of closure seems like a fairly recent TV psychobabble/spiritual entertainment plot device to me.

I don't know if it's really relevant, but I did read someone's speculation that kids growing up and learning to play in the bombed out streets of London during WW2 wound up doing better than kids in today's nanny safe playgrounds. People are tough and can often do more than they think.
 
It took 73 years to find the Titanic and they pretty much knew where it went down. Why do so many people have this misconception that finding an infinitesimally tiny airliner at the bottom of infinitely immense ocean (because that's what it is out there) should be so easy? :dunno:

I can understand the anguish of losing loved ones but when anger is directed at those trying to find them due to lack of results they lose my sympathy.


Technology today is a lot different,

No anger in the post. I just understand how people feel that are missing loved ones.
 
I think you may have just made everyone on this board fee a little older. LOL


Not intentional,

I'm new in the airplane world. I don't remember studying her in school, I wish we did rather than Napoleon. I would've believed as a kid that anything was possible!
 
A few hundred years ago people loosing touch with others forever was not all so uncommon. People moved on. The whole business of closure seems like a fairly recent TV psychobabble/spiritual entertainment plot device to me.

I don't know if it's really relevant, but I did read someone's speculation that kids growing up and learning to play in the bombed out streets of London during WW2 wound up doing better than kids in today's nanny safe playgrounds. People are tough and can often do more than they think.
People lose touch with others forever all the time in too many 'hotspots' around the world. What's amazing is that the rest of us know it, can even see it, and yet remain so insulated. But it's always been that way too.

I think the speculation thing is just that. I recall how so many people talked about how emotionally damaged so many Viet Nam vets were in part because of the unpopularity of the war and lack of popular support. But then I remember some of the truly damaged WWII vets I ran into as a child and young man. It's an honorable sacrifice that some survive better than other. Kids playing in a battle field get hurt emotionally and some of them badly. Stiff upper lip and move on.

We just have aspire to higher levels of good mental health in the 1st world.
 
People lose touch with others forever all the time in too many 'hotspots' around the world. What's amazing is that the rest of us know it, can even see it, and yet remain so insulated. But it's always been that way too.

I think the speculation thing is just that. I recall how so many people talked about how emotionally damaged so many Viet Nam vets were in part because of the unpopularity of the war and lack of popular support. But then I remember some of the truly damaged WWII vets I ran into as a child and young man. It's an honorable sacrifice that some survive better than other. Kids playing in a battle field get hurt emotionally and some of them badly. Stiff upper lip and move on.

We just have aspire to higher levels of good mental health in the 1st world.

Understood. OTOH I have an ex Marine buddy that was recon in Vietnam. He hated the permanently damaged stereotype Hollywood made so much money on. He went on to become a Mechanical Engineer, CG Pilot and eventually he retired as a commuter airline pilot. He's a good guy, tough and compassionate. Not much tolerance for BS though.
 
... No anger in the post. I just understand how people feel that are missing loved ones.

Didn't mean anger from you I was talking about the Chinese families seen practically rioting because the airplane hasn't been found yet.
 
It sucks that I had to Google who she was:


She seemed like an amazing person, I will read up on her further!

She was amazing in that she got as far as she got. Over the years she piled up 2 or more aircraft. Was not thought to be " top of the line" type pilot. On her final flight, the article stated she forgot to take her trailing radio antenna, ( a big mistake) and her navigator was an alcoholic. She married a man very wealthy, and well known in literary circles who promoted her flight to epic proportions. She sure was not a jackie cochrane.
 
We were young once, too, and didn't know who she was. And I'll never forget when my then-young-teen niece asked me quite seriously some years back (late 70's/early 80's) whether Paul McCartney had been in another band before Wings.

Ouch!

Older and much more edumacated!! :D
Please no one mention the Wright Bros or Glenn Curtiss!! :dunno:

My next door neighbors? At least, my kids would have you think I'm that old. :D
 
If I had family on board I would want answers.
In our limited and imperfect world there aren't always answers available. For findings things deep in the ocean technology today is better than 50 years ago but still quite primitive by absolute standards.

I heard they might be close. I know very little about what is true or not but I saw a news story about them finding some make-up and other items of interest on an island along with a radar image of what appeared to be landing gear under the water.
By now it has been pretty much discounted these 'findings' have anything to do with her disappearance. Also, just coolly analyzing events of that day that at least we know are true it is simple beyond comprehension that someone could entertain idea she landed on some other island, borders on science fiction.
 
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By now it has been pretty much discounted these 'findings' have anything to do with her disappearance. Also, just coolly analyzing events of that day that at least we know are true it is simple beyond comprehension that someone could entertain idea she landed on some other island, borders on science fiction.

Naw, she's hanging out with Elvis. Don't you read the Weekly World News?
 
They haven't found Amelia Earhart's plane yet, and they've been looking for it for almost 80 years.


I now understand the comparison but a Boeing 777 should be a bit easier to find then a small single. At least SOME debris, somewhere!
 
It sucks that I had to Google who she was:


She seemed like an amazing person, I will read up on her further!


Did some further reading up on her, amazing woman. We need more pioneers like that! It must've been tough because I'm sure people didn't take her seriously back then!
 
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