Well, I hope it wasn't like that one flight that left Brazil and lost radio contact and literally fell from the sky. Terrible way to die in my opinion. I'm a pessimist but I would love to see some survivors in this story. Where is Denzel?
http://news.yahoo.com/malaysia-airli...022306014.html
Jinxed by the es' Day, tbh
Well, I hope it wasn't like that one flight that left Brazil and lost radio contact and literally fell from the sky. Terrible way to die in my opinion. I'm a pessimist but I would love to see some survivors in this story. Where is Denzel?
That plane from Brazil was a Airbus that had a frozen airspeed indicator. This one was a Boeing 777 and
is supposed to be one of the safest planes made with a good safety record.
i've flown on that airlines and stayed in KL a couple of times. it's a really nice airline tbh...
Interesting.
Two stolen passports of people not on the flight, but on it...
terrorist attack? How can a plane disappear? don't they scan their location?
Records are made to be broken.
If you've ever flown over an ocean you'd know that there's a lot of water to cover to find one relatively small plane (probably only pieces), plus they don't radar planes the entire trip. They keep radio coms but when they lose that, there's no tower monitoring radar to see the plane disappear.
^It's a big plane, but I get your point.
I always try to get the seat farthest away from the window, too pussy to look outside tbh
they should've restricted the searching area along the line of the oil trace. The pilot knew the plane was gonna crash so he discharged the oil before the plant hit the water, which means the plane shouldn't be too far away from the oil trace. The trace points to the direction where the plane was heading, but it's quite obvious the yellows are too dumb to figure it out tbh.
I bet that if the UN promise to grant the country which's first to find the crashed plane the right to claim the entire South China sea, the plane would be found within an hour from now, tbh. The biggest irony is that all those countries want to claim the sea but they can't even find a ing plane within what they think as their own water territory, which's pathetic.
Traces drift with the current, so it's hard to know their location and if you're off as much as 500 feet you totally change the cone.
I fly so much that I generally get an isle seat if I am pushed for time, or a window seat if I want to sleep. I don't look out much.
What's this passport part of the story... think it really it's the cause?? Will we ever know??
Bunch of pilots/airmen in this thread. Very interesting.
http://www.ar15.com/forums/t_1_5/160...g.html&page=14
A lot of people are saying it's linked with terrorism but IMO human trafficking is just as likely especially from this part of the world (Southeast Asia). It would be smarter for them to go through a connecting airport in a different country(Beijing) rather than straight to the destination country (Europe etc) bc of how they check passports during boarding/exiting.
There are reports that the plane might've turned backwards so for all we know they s&r may be looking in the wrong part of the ocean
I guess you can pretty much rule out survivors/plane landing somewhere. In this day in age, 2-3 days without communication is an eternity and even if survivors survived the initial crash, could they really last this long in open waters?
Nope. Also, didn't they find the plane leaking oil?
There still should have been a distress call.
I seriously doubt the "oil slick" sighted was from the plane. There wouldn't be enough hydraulic fluid to be that large, and fuel wouldn't be as visible.
any chance the plane blew up in midair?
Most likely, but why are cell phones still ringing?
?
I guess i should read up some more.
http://www.stasiareport.com/the-big-...assenger-says-A Chinese family successfully rang the mobile phone of a passenger on board Malaysia Airlines plane MH370 which is still missing after it lost contact with the ground on Saturday.
A video clip of a man dialing the number of his elder brother was shown on Beijing Television's news bulletin. The call got connected, but no one picked up.
The man, who did not give his name, spoke to reporters at a Malaysia Airlines briefing in Beijing. He claimed that he made a total of three calls, but no one answered.
Desperate family members have asked Malaysia Airlines to use satellite technology to pick up the mobile phone signals of passengers before their phones run out of batteries.
- See more at: http://www.stasiareport.com/the-big-....9fRIOO1E.dpuf
Could be fake, but Idk.
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