Nice wiki of current news here although it is another forum. Amazingly, far more pages of speculation than here
http://www.flyertalk.com/forum/othe...-7-mar-2014-sar-underway-read-wiki-first.html
Our government and our military has no qualms with shooting down an airliner if we determine that's less of a threat then letting it continue to fly. That is the point I was making.
If that 777 were to depart right now, headed for the United States from somewhere, and if we detected it which I think is quite likely we wouldn't hesitate to shoot it down regardless of the passengers.
News is now reporting that plane climbed to FL450 after it lost contact, then possibly descended to 23,000.
Iirc Spot uses the older not so good Globalstar and the Delorme tracker is on Iridium. The Delorme is more money but compared to a 777 a couple of dozen of either is not relevant price wise.
My theory.
Catastrophic electrical fire/smoke in the cockpit. Transponders/comms, etc failed rapidly. Crew incapacitated. Plane flying itself, climbing, descending and eventually down! Nothing nefarious, no cockpit takeover, no suicide. Nothing but a tragic accident. It's in the Indian Ocean.
My theory.
Catastrophic electrical fire/smoke in the cockpit. Transponders/comms, etc failed rapidly. Crew incapacitated. Plane flying itself, climbing, descending and eventually down! Nothing nefarious, no cockpit takeover, no suicide. Nothing but a tragic accident. It's in the Indian Ocean.
For all the conspiracy theories out there, you may be right. Anybody know how secure the cockpits are on a foreign carrier?
The point is that a wide-area weapon is still a danger because of the time it'd take to gather the information and make that decision.
.
My theory.
Catastrophic electrical fire/smoke in the cockpit. Transponders/comms, etc failed rapidly. Crew incapacitated. Plane flying itself, climbing, descending and eventually down! Nothing nefarious, no cockpit takeover, no suicide. Nothing but a tragic accident. It's in the Indian Ocean.
You forgot about the ninja pirate aliens.My theory.
Catastrophic electrical fire/smoke in the cockpit. Transponders/comms, etc failed rapidly. Crew incapacitated. Plane flying itself, climbing, descending and eventually down! Nothing nefarious, no cockpit takeover, no suicide. Nothing but a tragic accident. It's in the Indian Ocean.
That would have been a helluva ride for the pax.
If bodies are found, I wonder how many last letters will be found with them.
If cabin was de pressurized, I'd say none. They'd all be dead.
If they were conscious for multiple hours and knew they were in trouble enough to write these letters, someone would break down the cockpit door and try to steer the plane towards safety, wouldn't they?
I can say this. If the airplane was taken for such nefarious purposes as have been suggested, the Intel community doesn't seem to worked up about it. They are not even briefing the disappearance, let alone telling us to be on the lookout for rogue wide-body jets attacking the US.
Now that this 45,000 climb is being reported, I would agree with redtail... The plane wondered up and down looking for a sweet spot in the stability range of the 777 airframe and continued on following the heading last entered in the FMS till the go juice ran out..
I'd have to say this is highly unlikely. Why would the xpndr fail without the FMS failing? If the FMS was working then the airplane is VERY capable. It would not wander flight levels trying to find a sweet spot or anything like that. The FMS (FMC/CDU) can be programed to cross waypoints at speed and altitudes from take off. As such if this were the case that the plane continued to function with everyone on board incapacitated, the airplane would hit all those waypoints at the speed and altitudes in the FMS (FMC/CDU). Eventually it would get to it's predetermined TOD would possibly descend from there.
If this was to be setup then it would function just fine without the crew. It is commonly setup on long flights. I do not see this being a possible scenario. Especially considering having such a selective failure as only the tcas failing. Seems highly unlikely that it alone would fail.
If, and that is at this point, a big if, the plane was indeed hijacked for nefarious purposes, Israel has much more to be concerned about than we do. I would think at this time they are on a very high alert.
I'd have to say this is highly unlikely. Why would the xpndr fail without the FMS failing? If the FMS was working then the airplane is VERY capable. It would not wander flight levels trying to find a sweet spot or anything like that. The FMS (FMC/CDU) can be programed to cross waypoints at speed and altitudes from take off. As such if this were the case that the plane continued to function with everyone on board incapacitated, the airplane would hit all those waypoints at the speed and altitudes in the FMS (FMC/CDU). Eventually it would get to it's predetermined TOD would possibly descend from there.
If this was to be setup then it would function just fine without the crew. It is commonly setup on long flights. I do not see this being a possible scenario. Especially considering having such a selective failure as only the tcas failing. Seems highly unlikely that it alone would fail.
FMS rarely makes speeds and altitudes that are in the box without airspeed intervention or use of speed brakes - both of which require human activation.
In a descent more than a climb yes. Even then it is not incredibly off. +/-1000 ft to 2000 ft max I would say. The airspeed +/- 20. My experience is limited to simulators and cbt's but the vnav logic is the same through and I doubt there is much difference in real performance. Please correct me if I am wrong.
Well the ceiling for the 777 is 43100' why would anyone have programmed the box for level 450 ?
Well the ceiling for the 777 is 43100' why would anyone have programmed the box for level 450 ?
If the oxygen in the passenger compartment could be turned off, maybe they did so and de-pressurized so as not to have to deal with the pax for the rest of the flight.
On 3/7/14 flight 370, a 777, went missing. Notice that the date says look for three sevens: 3/7/7+7. And the flight was also a 3, a 7, and a 0 to show that it went missing.
And seven days later is Pi day, 3/14. And the first time 7 shows up in the decimal equivalent of Pi is in the 14th place.
This is at least as meaningful as anything else we've heard so far.
Your post was number 707 of this thread
I am not sure the software would even let you enter FL450.....
Do you know what 707 is upside down?
On 3/7/14 flight 370, a 777, went missing. Notice that the date says look for three sevens: 3/7/7+7. And the flight was also a 3, a 7, and a 0 to show that it went missing.
And seven days later is Pi day, 3/14. And the first time 7 shows up in the decimal equivalent of Pi is in the 14th place.
This is at least as meaningful as anything else we've heard so far.