Posted on 07/01/2014 6:55:01 AM PDT by Uncle Chip
So in addition to turning off ACARS/tansponders at the beginning to avoid being tracked, the pilot then follows that up by cutting the power to probably everything but the engines an hour later in order to go dark just before he makes his critical turn.
The report inadvertently indicates about where/when this cut in power likely occurred as it shows the point that the plane was last seen by Malaysian radar at 18:22 followed by the Log On Request at 18:25 and that followed by the likely restoration of power at 18:29 when the turn would have occurred.
Seems to me this would have been one of the first things checked ... ANYthing that has/had to do with navigation/info-sharing, etc.
So they were smart enough to be tampering with the radar and avoid detection. Plane may be in Kyrgyzstan.
The Report is here:
“possible new evidence”
Oh, brother.
We will find that plane.
Unfortunately it will be after it is used for an attack.
One of these days, we are going to have to admit we are in a war.
What about the possibility that there was a fire on board?
Betcha Sheik Obomba knows where it is.
Not likely that the plane would have then flown for another 6 hours coming on and off autopilot for regular course corrections after a fire.
Early reports of the plane being flown to 40K feet suggested everyone in the plane OTHER THAN possibly the captain (who has a better system of reserve air tanks to breath) would have been rendered unconscious and likely died within 5 minutes.
That would leave the captain to do as he pleased. Likely he sent the copilot out of the cabin and locked the door when he did this.
OK ... I have never personally flown anything with more than two props on it, but ...
EVERYTHING has a breaker and/or a fuse on general aviation aircraft.
I wonder if this was as simple as flipping off the right breaker? The panels are all accessible in flight.
Would need a ‘heavy’ pilot to weigh in here.
It would seem so but it took 3 months for the Malaysians to release its military radar data showing where and when the plane was last seen and its direction.
That little piece of information fills in a big blank.
“We will find that plane. Unfortunately it will be after it is used for an attack.”
Wonder why all the eye witness accounts of islanders seeing a plane flying VERY low, and those on the oil rigs who thought they saw one in distress were never given any investigation I’ve seen reported.
Regardless of whether it was highjacked and to be used as a flying bullet to somewhere....or purposefully taken into the sea by a mad man pilot, the weakness of being able to track large commercial planes in that area of the world is now widely known to all terrorist groups.
thanx for the reminder
It is possible according to this that when power was cut to go dark the oxygen to the passengers/crew was cut at the same time. Those 7 minutes between 18:22 and 18:29 might be when everyone but the pilot succumbed to hypoxia.
Yuppers. But we still cannot say if the plane was really flown to the south and ditched in the sea, or if it headed north. Some country’s radar system must have seen it for sure, and if so why nothing being said? Hell, they can read our license plates from a satellite. What’s the deal?
Careful. Simply flying the plane to the upper limit of its service ceiling would not incapacitate anyone. Unless of course the cabin was deliberately depressurized, and the plane flown at altitude for long enough to deplete the oxygen generators for the cabin masks; then death follows shortly thereafter for those outside the cockpit.
The cockpit masks - the “rubber jungle” - are full face masks, not just nose cups, and are pressurized to PUSH air into the pilots’ lungs.
In the general cabin, the O2 generators just try hard to increase the O2 PPM to the point where you just MIGHT get enough 02 into your lungs to survive the emergency descent.
Thing is, at altitudes above 30-35,000 feet, the atmosphere is sooo thin, that even though the masks expel 02, there is little pressure to fill your lungs when your diaphragm tightens (ie you try to inhale). In a ‘normal’ depressurization in flight emergency, the pilot MUST descend to an altitude where there is enough ambient air pressure to fill your lungs. If indeed the cabin depressurized at 40K feet or so, hypoxia and suffocation would take less than 3 minutes once the cabin pressure dropped below about .5 atmospheres.
SO ... a sole pilot (or two pilots) could kill everyone but themselves via this method.
But sadly(?), the OCCAM’S RAZOR model points to a fire that screwed up a lot of systems serially.
Bush admitted we were in a war in 2001 right after 9/11. Since then the US has turned a blind eye to it.
I hope you’re right about the fire. The thought of all those passengers being killed on purpose for either stealing the plane or simply making it vanish is worse than any accident.
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