Posted on 03/28/2014 6:54:22 AM PDT by SeekAndFind
AMSA updates state that five aircrafts spotted multiple objects of various colours during Fridays search for the missing Malaysian Airlines flight MH370.
Though the objects have not been verified, AMSA states that they cannot be discounted either.
It states that a Royal New Zealand Air Force (RNZAF) P3 Orion reported sighting a number of objects white or light in colour and a fishing buoy.
A Royal Australian Air Force P3 Orion relocated the objects detected by the RNZAF Orion and reported it had seen two blue/grey rectangular objects floating in the ocean.
A second RAAF P3 Orion spotted various objects of various colours in a separate part of the search area.
Crew on board a New Zealand military plane has spotted several objects in the Indian Ocean west of Perth, reports BBC. Surveillance ships will likely reach the area by Saturday.
Malaysia Acting Transport Minister Hishammuddin Hussein said that the focus right now is to reach the debris sighted by the satellites so that it can be identified if the debris sighted is of MH370 or not.
He also said that Malaysia will follow all possible ways to find the 'black box' of the missing plane.
While addressing media, Malaysia Acting Transport Minister Hishammuddin Hussein has revealed that the MH370 flew at a higher speed than previously presumed, as reported by BBC.
He further added that many nations, including Japan and Thailand, have sent satellite images and that the range of objects show the complexity in the search operation. He also said that Australia is leading the search operation.
(Excerpt) Read more at zeenews.india.com ...
Maybe Gen. McInerney is right and it landed in Pakistan, and was perhaps destroyed by our special forces. The Apollo 11 mission took less time than it has to actually secure a single piece of “debris” in the Indian Ocean. Why is that?
May the families receive closure once something is located.
Because the moon is much easier to find.
This image of one the objects spotted was taken by a journalist on board the New Zealand plane
Why is it taking so long for ANY ship to get to the location of this ‘debris’?
I am starting to believe a previous post about the pilots wanting that guy freed and then planting it in the ocean when they didn’t get their way.
Anyone remember a plane being shot down by Russia in the 1980s? I was a teen then but am remembering when the US was looking for the black box, the Russians were reving their ships all around so the ‘ping’ couldn’t be heard.
It just seems that certain folk don’t want this plane found.
If that a/c is in Asia, and I think that it is, the fooling around in the void of the Indian Ocean is just a distraction while they try to find the plane and the perps. Going through all the hoops on the international stage has got to be a daunting diplomatic task.
RE: This image of one the objects spotted was taken by a journalist on board the New Zealand plane
Can’t the plane fly any closer?
Once again a Malaysian official not knowing what he is talking about. To get to the new search area 700 miles closer it would have flown slower at lower altitude not faster.
The location are over one and a half thousand miles from any significant city on Earth and the zone is very large and moving. There are, in fact, ships in the area now, but they are trying to find a few hundred pieces of debris in an area the size of Alaska.
It's difficult for people who've never been involved in such a search to understand the type of scale of these distances and areas.
Higher speeds consume more fuel than lower speeds and MUCH higher speeds consume MUCH more fuel.
It SEEMS that maybe the pilot was in a rush to go somewhere and he burned much more fuel than he thought he would and therefore ran out of fuel and crashed.
They did. The rectangle measure 1" X 3".
Basically, no. These are substantial planes and they don't turn on a dime. And they will be doing grid type searches - they would only deviate and try to go back for a closer look at a piece of debris if it was unusual and identifiable, because doing so disrupts the whole search pattern.
... and it must be irritating to take 5 hours to fly there and only be able to search for 2 hours. Then fly back for 5 hours so that your gas doesn’t run out.
or that they want it found in the right place.
One thing is for sure -- the pilot did not want this plane to ever be found.
That sounds logical but they argue that the faster speed consumes fuel at a faster rate which reduces the range so the aircraft falls into the sea further north.
The problem is that the new search area is the same area that actually assumed a slower air speed — 400 knots rather than 450 knots:
https://www.facebook.com/178566888854999/photos/pcb.740971779281171/740971732614509/?type=1&theater
and they don’t know how much fuel he had, or burned, or had left when the plane went down.
Check the link at post 17 —
It takes a while for the ocean to digest those big meals.
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