Malaysia Airlines loses contact with plane en route to Beijing with 239 aboard

clint308

Well-Known Member
The Australian Maritime Safety Authority tweeted on Friday that the RNZAF Orion would supply pictures of the objects as soon as it landed at RAAF Base Pearce, north of Perth.
The sighting will need to be confirmed by ship, which is not expected to reach the area until Saturday.
New radar data analysis prompted authorities to re-focus the six-nation search 1100km to the northeast of its original location, and some 1850km west of Perth, following updated advice from the international investigation team in Malaysia.
The previous focus was in an area 2500km southwest of the West Australian capital.
"Continuing analysis indicates that the plane was travelling faster than was previously estimated, resulting in increased fuel usage, reducing the possible distance it travelled south into the Indian Ocean," Australian Transport Safety Bureau chief commissioner Martin Dolan said on Friday.


March 28, 2014: Aviation experts are now confident that Malaysia Airlines flight MH370 was deliberately flown thousands of kilometres off course by someone trained to fly Boeing 777s.

"This is our best estimate of the area in which the aircraft is likely to have crashed into the ocean."
He said the search area could change again as new information emerged.
Australian Maritime Safety Authority emergency response manager John Young said all search planes and ships had been moved to the new zone, which was "now our best place to go".
"We have moved on from those search areas to the newest credible lead," Mr Young said, adding however, that the decision to shift focus was not based on a new theory but a refining of the original analysis used to plot the location of the aircraft's possible resting place.
"The analysis is in fact the same form as we started with," he said.
"I don't count the original work a waste of time."


March 27, 2014: Officials hold a press conference to discuss the specifics of the MH370 search, while satellite images are released showing potential debris.

Mr Young also stressed, however, that he would not use the term "debris field" in relation to various objects spotted by satellite.
The new location will also allow search planes to spend more time on the scene. Previously, they only had one to two hours before having to return to RAAF Base Pearce.
Mr Young said weather conditions in the new search area were also more favourable.
The new area is shallower, with water depths ranging from 2000 to 4000 metres.
Any wreckage found would be handed over to Malaysian authorities.
The new "credible lead" on a possible crash site, almost three weeks to the day since the plane carrying 239 people disappeared on March 8, also came with a warning from Malaysia Airlines of the effect on the families of rumours and speculation about the flight's fate.


March 28, 2014: Bad weather is delaying the search for debris from Malaysia Airlines flight MH370 off the Western Australian coast.

"Whilst we understand that there will inevitably be speculation during this period, we do ask people to bear in mind the effect this has on the families of all those on board," the airline's group chief executive Ahmad Jauhari Yahya said.
"Their anguish and distress increases with each passing day, with each fresh rumour, and with each false or misleading report."
Mr Yahya said preparations were underway for family members of passengers and crew to be taken to Perth, should physical wreckage be found
 

SnapsProvolone

Well-Known Member
Sad part is the ocean has distributed any debris such that locating and retriving the data recorders is like searching for an honest politician. Probably not happening.
 

ZaraBeth420

Well-Known Member
How do you lose a plane??????


A Malaysia Airlines flight carrying 239 people en route from Kuala Lumpur to Beijing is missing, the airline confirmed.
A Malaysia Airlines Boeing B777-200
Wikimedia Commons
The Boeing 777-200 aircraft had 227 passengers, including two infants, and 12 crew members on board, the airline said in a statement. The passengers were of 13 different nationalities.

http://www.cbsnews.com/news/malaysia-airlines-loses-contact-with-plane-en-route-to-beijing-with-239-aboard/#postComments
Another one? Didn't this happen just a few months ago?
 

BarnBuster

Virtually Unknown Member
I see that the deep-sea survey company Ocean Infinity is going to propose another search to the Malaysian government on a no fee/no find basis as they had done back in 2018. CEO, Oliver Plunkett, said company was “actively engaged” in trying to get the search restarted.
 

tangerinegreen555

Well-Known Member
Lolz, where you been might have been the biggest mystery of them all. Nice to see you! Everything good? Life just keeping you busy?
I'm cool, hanging in there. Got sick for the first time in four years, recovering from a nasty cold.

And looking for the missing B-25 they never found, not real far from you.

Screenshot_20230311-174615_Chrome.jpg
It was a massive mystery in it's time. 20' deep river, never found.
 

neosapien

Well-Known Member
I'm cool, hanging in there. Got sick for the first time in four years, recovering from a nasty cold.

And looking for the missing B-25 they never found, not real far from you.

View attachment 5269552
It was a massive mystery in it's time. 20' deep river, never found.

Oh yeah, it's a big mystery. Just had Adventures with Purpose diving the rivers looking for missing people. They didn't find it either. They did find my old acid hookup though. :o

 
Top