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Sixth was the beeping transponder located by Jafari and the helicopter crew the next day, apparent physical evidence of intelligent technology. And so it probably was. Col. Mooy noted that the beeping transponder appeared to be from an American C-141. These large transport aircraft carried such transponders designed to be released in the event of a crash, but they'd been having problems with the beepers being ejected simply by turbulence over the mountains just north of Tehran.
Remember the source calling it a "transponder" was an Iranian, Col Mooy, perhaps a mistranslation, and he meant transmitter, specifically the ELT as suggested by Direne is probably what was found:
originally posted by: chunder
a reply to: Arbitrageur
I'm certainly no aviation expert but I don't think transponders "fall" out of planes. They are built into cockpit avionics systems and if your transponder "fell" out then likely the plane is in a bad way as part of the cockpit has disintegrated.
It seems plausible that an overly sensitive ejection system could eject the ELT due to turbulence as the other article suggested had happened over the Iranian mountains on other occasions. Prior to 1985, the false positive rate for ELTs was about 97%, and new procedures were implemented in 1985 but false positive rates are still pretty high.
Automatic deployable ELTs are designed to automatically eject from the aircraft when a crash has occurred.
The original ELTs were manufactured to the specifications of an FAA technical standard order (TSO-C91). Historically, these ELT’s have experienced an activation rate of less than 25 percent in actual crashes and a 97 percent false-alarm rate. In 1985, a new TSO-C91A ELT was developed, which substantially reduces or eliminates many problems with the earlier model.
If you're searching for an object that went down (landed or crashed) why wouldn't you want to take the pilot who saw WHERE it went down with you? The pilot made some effort paying attention to the location where it went down visually according to this, so it would make sense to bring him along so he could assist in pointing out where he saw the object go down.
originally posted by: Direne
Yet, the pilot was extremely lucky to find the beacon itself with no signs of debris at all. And he did it close to a house with a garden (sic). And he did it without he being a member of a rescue and recovery team. And he did it in his spare time (remember his base was some 200 Km away from the area, and remember that Mehbarad was closer to the site). There is no way a pilot involves himself in a search party: it is not his job.
It's very likely part of the story is being omitted and we are not being told everything the US government knows. I suppose I wouldn't rule out a crash after reading this account that witnesses near where the ELT was found heard a loud noise and bright flash, which sounds like a possible description of a crash in the distance they couldn't directly see, though, it's far from any conclusive evidence of a crash:
So again, I feel the entire story was fabricated to hide a fatal accident.
originally posted by: Direne
a reply to: chunder
In the end, if any randomly selected theory could explain the events it means those events are not relevant as UFO events.
An unidentified flying object (UFO) is any perceived aerial phenomenon that cannot immediately be identified or explained. Most UFOs are identified or investigated as conventional objects or phenomena. The phrase was coined as an acronym by Project Blue Book project head Edward J. Ruppelt, but today UFO is widely used as a stand-in for extraterrestrial spacecraft-aircraft claimed to be observed by various people.