Steinhauer
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For starters the location beacon never went off - it goes off after an impact.
An ABC News report added another twist to the mystery Thursday evening. Citing two unnamed U.S. officials, the network said two separate communications systems on the missing aircraft were shut down separately, 14 minutes apart.
The officials told ABC they believe the plane's data reporting system was shut down at 1:07 a.m. Saturday, while the transponder transmitting location and altitude was shut down at 1:21 a.m.
"This is beginning to come together to say that ...this had to have been some sort of deliberate act," ABC aviation analyst John Nance told CNN's Erin Burnett.
It's being to look like is was not an accident , it looks more like someone crash the plane to commit suicide . The pilot had some mental health history .
If it had crashed, the locator beacon would send out a GPS signal ... which it never did.
not if it crashed into ocean
they are designed to go off if the crash is in the ocean.
do you see something wrong with that picture?
Nope.
So ... right now it is highly possible someone is placing an EMP in a commercial jetliner - reprogramming the avionics controls ... giving it a false itinerary .. and planning on flying, undetected, into US airspace?
oh wow! yea good luck flying over to American airspace with the remaining fuel left it had!
irrelevant.Not talking about right now. I am talking about months, years maybe, from now.
this plane was stolen? says who?Someone stole a plane.
I'm gonna have to ask you for a source where you find the info that says it is designed to send a signal upon impact in ocean.
And there’s another confusing twist. An emergency beacon that would have sent data if the plane was about to impact the ocean apparently did not go off, the official said. The beacons, known as Emergency Locator Transmitters, activate automatically upon immersion in fresh or salt water, but must remain on the surface for a distress signal to transmit.
but must remain on the surface for a distress signal to transmit.
bingo.
that's what I've been trying to tell you. it's utterly useless if a plane nose-dived into water. the only next course of action is to get a sub to find the black box.
They are completely waterproof and switch to ULF frequencies the denser the water becomes.
Submarines use ULF frequencies to communicate.
You would think that a $250,000,000 plane had some engineering foresight for such disasters ...
the problem is ... it never went off.
In a strange twist, Malaysia's military believes it tracked the missing Malaysia Airlines flight MH370 by radar over the Strait of Malacca, far from where it last made contact with civilian air traffic control over the Gulf of Thailand.
A military source confirmed with Reuters that the Boeing 777-200ER with 239 on board changed course and made it to the other side of the Malay peninsula.
"It changed course after Kota Baru and took a lower altitude. It made it into the Malacca Straits," the military official, who has been briefed on investigations, told Reuters.