Oh, the PLANE? No...that's not here.
Oh, the PLANE? No...that's not here.
As proof that no one in the human race really knows what the hell they are doing, it is confirmed that the missing Malaysian 777 flight 370 is not in the massive search area thoroughly combed over the past 2 months (costing tens of millions of dollars). The pings they said they heard were not really pings. They were ping-ish, or ping-like, but definitely not pings and surely not from an airplane black box. Maybe they emanated from the elusive pingfish. Or maybe the sounds they heard were from some guy on the boat repeatedly clicking his ball point pen. Either way, never trust anything anyone ever says, because there is a good chance they are making it all up.
http://www.cnn.com/2014/05/29/world/asi ... ?hpt=hp_t1(CNN) -- The 850-square-kilometer swath of the Indian Ocean where officials have focused their hunt for missing Malaysia Airlines Flight 370 probably isn't the right place, the joint search agency said Thursday.
The area off the coast of western Australia is not the "final resting place of MH370," the Australia-based Joint Agency Coordination Centre said.
Pings were not from Flight 370... now what?
Officials zeroed in on that zone after acoustic pings originally thought to be from the black boxes of the missing plane were detected in early April.
"The Australian Transport Safety Bureau (ATSB) has advised that the search in the vicinity of the acoustic detections can now be considered complete and in its professional judgment, the area can now be discounted as the final resting place of MH370," a statement from the JACC said.
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Re: Oh, the PLANE? No...that's not here.
So it still could be in the Cardamom mountains.
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Re: Oh, the PLANE? No...that's not here.
This better be it, boys.
http://www.cnn.com/2014/06/18/world/asi ... ?hpt=hp_t1Washington (CNN) -- The doubters have spoken.
A group of independent experts -- who prodded authorities to release satellite data on Malaysia Airlines Flight 370 -- says it thinks it knows the approximate location of the missing aircraft.
Five separate computer models all place the plane in a tight cluster of spots in the south Indian Ocean — hundreds of miles southwest of the previous search site.
"We recommend that the search for MH370 be focused in this area," the group said in a statement late Tuesday.
Photos: The search for Malaysia Airlines Flight 370 Photos: The search for Malaysia Airlines Flight 370
MH370: 100 days of very little progress Aviation industry aims to improve plane tracking Official: MH370 is not in ping area Families offer reward for MH370 info
"While there remain a number of uncertainties and some disagreements as to the interpretation of aspects of the data, our best estimates of a location of the aircraft (is) near 36.02 South 88.57 East," according to the statement, which was approved by 10 named experts.
The group opted to release its statement late Tuesday in advance of a BBC documentary on the missing plane, and ahead of the Australian government's announcement on the focus of the search, so that there would be no question about the independence of the group's findings, said one member of the group, American Mobile Satellite Corp. co-founder Mike Exner.
"We wanted to get our best estimate out," Exner said.
The group believes that after the Boeing 777 circumnavigated Indonesia, for reasons that are still unknown, the plane traveled south at an average speed of 470 knots, probably at a consistent altitude and constant heading, Exner said. All five computer models developed by the experts place the aircraft in a "pretty tight cluster...plus or minus 50 miles of each other," he said.
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