#121
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"the radar return was last seen at 02:40L near Pulau Perak in the Straits of Malacca"
This is actually interesting. Do you remember that initially MH told people that the aircraft disappeared after two hours of flying? And only after some time they changed their statement and said they actually lost contact at 1:30L which almost matched the disappearence from the FlightRadar website. 2:40L is exactly 2hrs after the plane departed. So if this new information is true, MH might really have received the last information from the flight at 2:40L. Maybe that have been the last ACARS transmissions which might be the reason why they haven't released the ACARS data to the public yet. If the plane was flying at 3000ft there might have been an incident when it actually turned around. Maybe a loss of cabin pressure that forced the pilot to go to a lower altitude. But then there should have been a distress call unless parts of the electronics got damaged. The pilot might have tried to fly the plane back to the mainland. But I've got no clue why it then crossed the mainland and continued its way out over the Straits of Malacca. I also find it quite strange that a plane appears on military radar and flies over a country and that doesn't trigger any action? There's still some information missing... This still doesn't make sense. Let's see what we get tomorrow. |
#122
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How can these be reconciled?
I think the Malaysian Air Force has made a mistake in asserting that they subsequently tracked this a/c west to the Straits of Malacca. If the transponder was [switched] off it would be hard to be confident of the a/c you were tracking I'd have thought. And if the transponder was still on as the Air Force implicitly claims, why doesn't FR or Planefinder or anyone else have data showing that position?
http://www.smh.com.au/world/malaysia...311-hvhjg.html
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Philip |
#123
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Quote:
Someone thinks they found it from the satellites http://ireport.cnn.com/docs/DOC-1103537 On another note, seems ACARS sent two burts of engine data when it vanished http://www.newscientist.com/article/...vanishing.html Last edited by Tamara S; 12th March 2014 at 09:18 AM. |
#124
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Quote:
The article doesn't say exactly where they pinned this sighting? |
#125
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#126
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Now the military chief is denying he said that it was last tracked over the Malaca strait, it seems they say something and then retract it hours later. Yet he said the stuff during a press conference. Bizzare
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#127
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Sounds like all the Malaysian government is sure of is the plane is not at the airport....
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Next Trips: Feb BNE-CBR-BNE, QF 18May BNE-DPS-KUL-PEN-SIN-BNE, VA/AirAsia/QF 05Oct BNE-YVR-PDX-YVR-BNE, AC |
#128
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Malaysian minister says "its not the right time to release military data" This has caused angry outrage by the familys.
They have now expanded the search to land areas. They are hiding something !!! https://mobile.twitter.com/STForeignDesk |
#129
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#130
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Gotta love the speculation, about turns and everything else that is taking place with the search and reporting on MH370. I feel the Malaysian government knows more than it is letting on but for "sensitive" reasons is keeping quiet where possible.
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