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(Quote: voanews.com)
A British satellite company says authorities have yet to search what it believes is the most likely crash site of the missing Malaysian jet.
The search location was determined based on electronic signals sent from the plane to a communications satellite owned by Inmarsat. An Inmarsat official told the BBC on Tuesday that the location searched was "further to the northeast than our area of highest probability."
But as Horizon reports, the Ocean Shield ship never got to the Inmarsat hotspot because it picked up sonar detections some distance away that it thought were coming from the jet's submerged flight recorders.
The priority was to investigate these "pings", and two months were spent searching 850 sq km of sea bed. Ultimately, it turned out to be a dead end.
originally posted by: stumason
a reply to: Pakd-on-mystery
Apparently....
But as Horizon reports, the Ocean Shield ship never got to the Inmarsat hotspot because it picked up sonar detections some distance away that it thought were coming from the jet's submerged flight recorders.
The priority was to investigate these "pings", and two months were spent searching 850 sq km of sea bed. Ultimately, it turned out to be a dead end.
So, they were on their way, but got distracted by the pings and never got there.
originally posted by: Pakd-on-mystery
a reply to: VoidHawk
It really makes you wonder what exactly is going on..
Why would they ignore Inmarsat's information?
originally posted by: stumason
a reply to: VoidHawk
Are they? That's the first I am hearing of that.
From what I know, all the pingers in the world will emit a frequency of 37.5KHz They have chosen this frequency for it's ability to propagate through the water.
Interesting, short article on how they work