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Zaphod58
reply to post by Vasa Croe
You need to be able to cut power because they fail sometimes, and start going off for no reason.
We used to use an ejectable unit that was in the base of the tail. There were shock sensors in the wheel wells. Hit them too hard and a mechanical ejector launched it.
We had a bird sit there and fire three of them while sitting parked because of a bad sensor.
Vasa Croe
Again, seems like the design on these is highly flawed for it to be a true "safety" device. Guessing there will be some revisions on this device coming up if MH370 is ever found and deemed to be a crash.
Zaphod58
reply to post by Vasa Croe
This unit is different, it remains attached. The activation method is the same. The battery in if is used to broadcast for the full 48 hours after activation.
These units are pretty bulletproof, but like everything built by people they can and do fail. There are no systems that are guaranteed to survive a crash. You are talking about an event that puts several hundred Gs on equipment and people in a very short hard period of time. Before you add in any explosion.
Plane crashes are incredibly violent events. That is why the recorders are so strong.
AugustusMasonicus
Vasa Croe
Again, seems like the design on these is highly flawed for it to be a true "safety" device. Guessing there will be some revisions on this device coming up if MH370 is ever found and deemed to be a crash.
If I remember correctly on Air France 477, which impacted the ocean at a severe angle of attack and at high rate of speed, did not have any of its ELTs deploy and it can safely assumed that they were destroyed on impact.
AugustusMasonicus
Vasa Croe
Again, seems like the design on these is highly flawed for it to be a true "safety" device. Guessing there will be some revisions on this device coming up if MH370 is ever found and deemed to be a crash.
If I remember correctly on Air France 477, which impacted the ocean at a severe angle of attack and at high rate of speed, did not have any of its ELTs deploy and it can safely assumed that they were destroyed on impact.
Planes have run out of fuel and landed safely before, so I don't know why you'd say it would go into a flat spin.
ChesterJohn
If this plane did go the way that Chris Goodfellow says, when it ran out of fuel whether are 5K or 25k the plane would go into a flat spin and throw itself apart. It will not take a direct nose dive as the AirFrance craft did.
optimumsource
reply to post by xmaddness
On March 18 Jeff Wise wrote an article for Future Tense with the headline 'A “Startlingly Simple Theory” About the Missing Airliner is Sweeping the Internet. It’s Wrong.' He goes on to state later in the article that 'For one thing, while it’s true that MH370 did turn toward Langkawi and wound up overflying it, whoever was at the controls continued to maneuver after that point as well, turning sharply right at VAMPI waypoint, then left again at GIVAL. Such vigorous navigating would have been impossible for unconscious men.'. I think the hero theory is not disproved if we add that perhaps once the plane reached Langkawi the situation with the plane was so adverse that it could not be landed. The pilots then instead placed the plane on autopilot perhaps and soon after lost consciousness from smoke inhalation.
ChesterJohn
AugustusMasonicus
Vasa Croe
Again, seems like the design on these is highly flawed for it to be a true "safety" device. Guessing there will be some revisions on this device coming up if MH370 is ever found and deemed to be a crash.
If I remember correctly on Air France 477, which impacted the ocean at a severe angle of attack and at high rate of speed, did not have any of its ELTs deploy and it can safely assumed that they were destroyed on impact.
If this plane did go the way that Chris Goodfellow says, when it ran out of fuel whether are 5K or 25k the plane would go into a flat spin and throw itself apart. It will not take a direct nose dive as the AirFrance craft did.
the pieces will be large enough to find.
Zaphod58
reply to post by ChesterJohn
The two cases it happened with had different crash types, but Helios 522 had someone with flight experience trying to save it.
Payne Stewarts' Lear spiralled straight down.
"It's soon to impact the ground; he is in a descending spiral."
Zaphod58
reply to post by Vasa Croe
If it is an electrical fire then cutting power is the first step in fighting it. If you don't cut power it keeps arcing and the fire keeps going.
sy.gunson
The sighting by Oil Rig worker Mike McKay refers to an aircraft to his west at high altitude on fire.
AugustusMasonicus
sy.gunson
The sighting by Oil Rig worker Mike McKay refers to an aircraft to his west at high altitude on fire.
Doing some simple geometry with your map image puts McKay 446km away from the aircraft's last known position. Even if he were able to see well beyond the curvature of the earth to where its last know position was reported (which he could not even if the aircraft were at 45,000') it would not appear 'burning at a high altitude' as he claims. Due to his position it would appear low on the horizon. His report is obviously bogus.