Posted on 05/12/2014 1:25:11 PM PDT by Theoria
Searchers Focus on April 5 Signals as Confidence Fades Over April 8 Detections
Searchers preparing to resume the underwater hunt for Malaysia Airlines Flight 370 increasingly suspect that some of the electronic signals detected last month didn't come from the jetliner's black-box flight recorders, a senior Australian naval officer said.
The doubtsbased on further acoustic analysis of the transmissions by Australian authorities over recent weeksrepresent another potential setback in the two-month-old operation. An initial underwater search in the southern Indian Ocean has already failed to find any sign of the missing plane, while a costly air-and-ship search of the ocean's surface turned up only garbage.
Authorities in April clung to hope that electronic transmissions picked up by Australian naval vessel ADV Ocean Shield on four occasions on April 5 and April 8 would provide a breakthrough in the search. But authorities are increasingly considering only the two transmissions on April 5 as relevant to the search, Australian naval Commander James Lybrand, captain of the Ocean Shield search vessel, said in an interview late last week. Further analysis of the streams of signals detected three days later on April 8 has led authorities to doubt that they were from a man-made device, Cmdr. Lybrand said.
Each of the transmissions on April 8 were intermittent and at a frequency of around 27 kHzmuch lower than the 37.5 kHz frequency that beacons are designed to emit, and also lower than the 33.3 kHz frequency of other transmissions on April 5. "As far as frequency goes, between 33 kHz and 27 kHz is a pretty large jump," Cmdr. Lybrand said.
The Joint Agency Coordination Center, the Australian agency leading the search, didn't immediately respond to a request for comment on Cmdr. Lybrand's remarks.
(Excerpt) Read more at online.wsj.com ...
analysis of the streams of signals detected three days later on April 8 has led authorities to doubt that they were from a man-made device, Cmdr. Lybrand said.
See, I knew it! Space Aliens!
And what might that some ping be?
Call Ed Harris, he knows what they are.
This is almost starting to sound like the plot of Airplane.
‘Sum Ting Wong’ is more apropos in this aviation case.../s
Maybe that plane never existed in the first place.
There were 4 pings in that area.
They are simply dismissing the 2 least likely to concentrate on the other 2 most likely.
'Sum Ping Wong' or rather 'Sum Pings Wong'-- 2 to be exact.
We need to show more patience here. It just took too long for the poor Iranians to figure out which button to push, now no one wants to play.
Wonder if anyone is looking in Brunei. The Sultan has recently gone full Sharia Islamic law. Wonder if the Jahadi’s have found a new hideout and a new plane?
They seem to have searched near the least likely first, though...
That’s probably why they dismissed it —
Good one. I was too buried in formatting .csv files and missed that...think it’s time for a brew.
Lybrand gave no explanation as to what the 8 April pings were.
But archaeologists have previously surmised that the signals may have come from satellite tracking devices tagged to marine animals like sharks and turtles.
https://uk.news.yahoo.com/malaysia-airlines-plane-mh370-pings-were-not-black-151930519.html#SsfCk25
So then all those tagged turtles, sharks, whales swimming around down there are interfering with black box pings —
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