buickanddeere
Super Member
Not enough fuel on board.
With all the dithering on the night of the disappearance . There was enough time to land in some out of the way place and refuel. Then carry on sneaking to some hiding place.
Not enough fuel on board.
They probably put tap water in the batteries too
I can certainly see why mangostin would be coveted and a reason for making a whole plane disappear...no wonder the Chinese are so bothered by the loss:duh:
I was involved in the design of the access hatch. I choose not to discuss the specifics... but one would have access to the Fwd E/E bay and Fwd pressurized cargo bay.From the access door in the floor of the flight deck into the from avionics compartment. How much access is there to the oxygen system , into the front wheel well and back into the cargo compartments?
What other access hatches are there from the passenger deck down into the lower lever of the airframe?
Here's an article with much less sinister speculation than what we've been seeing so far...
A Startlingly Simple Theory About the Missing Malaysia Airlines Jet | Autopia | Wired.com
Here's an article with much less sinister speculation than what we've been seeing so far...
A Startlingly Simple Theory About the Missing Malaysia Airlines Jet | Autopia | Wired.com
A law enforcement official told CNN that the plane's programmed change in direction was entered at least 12 minutes before the plane's verbal sign-off with air traffic controllers at 1:19 a.m. Malaysia Airlines Flight 370: How do planes change flight paths? - CNN.com
The 777 is all fly by wire. No physical link between the controls and the control surfaces. From the Boeing 777 info page:Maybe they were flying the airplane, not the autopilot flying the airplane. Pilots can do that, ya know? I am not familiar with the 777, but some equipment has cable controls. Some have hydraulic boost to assist, but if hydraulics are lost, one can still fly the aircraft. Redundancy is supposed to be built into the equipment. Hand flying without the hydraulics can be a little more difficult, but certainly not impossible, and most train for it in the simulator.
From the "Boeing B-777: Fly-By-Wire Flight Controls" PDF:http://www.boeing.com/boeing/commercial/777family/pf/pf_facts.page said:The flight-control system for the 777 airplane is different from those on other Boeing airplane designs. Rather than have the airplane rely on cables to move the ailerons, elevator, and rudder, Boeing designed the 777 with fly-by-wire technology. As a result, the 777 uses wires to carry electrical signals from the pilot control wheel, column, and pedals to a primary flight computer.
http://www.davi.ws/avionics/TheAvionicsHandbook_Cap_11.pdf said:As noted previously, the 777 flight deck utilizes standard flight deck controls; a control column, wheel, and rudder pedals that are mechanically linked between the Captain’s and First Officer’s controls. This precludes any conflicting input between the Captain and First Officer into the Primary Flight Control System. Instead of the pilot controls driving quadrants and cables, as in a conventional system, they are attached to electrical transducers that convert mechanical displacement into electrical signals. A gradient control actuator is attached to the two control column feel units. These units provide the tactile feel of the control column by proportionally increasing the amount of force the pilot experiences during a maneuver with an increase in airspeed. This is consistent with a pilot’s experience in conventional commercial jet transports. Additionally, the flight deck controls are fitted with what are referred to as ‘‘backdrive actuators.” As the name implies, these actuators backdrive the flight deck controls during autopilot operation. This feature is also consistent with what a pilot is used to in conventionally controlled aircraft and allows the pilot to monitor the operation of the autopilot via immediate visual feedback of the pilot controls that is easily recognizable.
Not true... on the 777 there is a mechanical cable backup such that the pilot can take physical control.The 777 is all fly by wire. No physical link between the controls and the control surfaces. From the Boeing 777 info page:
From the "Boeing B-777: Fly-By-Wire Flight Controls" PDF:
Aaron Z
The 777 is all fly by wire. No physical link between the controls and the control surfaces. From the Boeing 777 info page:
From the "Boeing B-777: Fly-By-Wire Flight Controls" PDF:
Aaron Z
Not true... on the 777 there is a mechanical cable backup such that the pilot can take physical control.
http://http://theunhivedmind.com/wordpress3/2014/03/13/awacs-hijack-proven-with-malaysia-airlines-flight-377/
This is an interesting theory. May be way off base but interesting. I'll let some of you more learned folks poke holes in this one.
Am I the only one that is having trouble opening this link? Says it couldn't find the http.