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Thread: Air Malaysia missing.

  1. #371
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    Quote Originally Posted by Blknight.aus View Post
    more or less, thats what is inside the orange black box.

    you were using it in ideal circumstances.

    The ones that are in use in the black box are not in ideal circumstances.

    Firstly they are transmitting from inside the black box AND often inside the Aircraft.

    Secondly they dont always get a clear line of sight out of debry fields... and they dont always wind up with the antennae facing in a useful direction.

    a very rough analogy for what the black box is up against and your scenario would be this.

    Imagine if your plane flew into a dumpster then someone closed the lid. After that they moved the dumpster into a hire yard that delt soley with loaning out dumpsters on that day the yard had a complete hire out return. Theres 16 enterances into the yard and the guy on the forklift was a real jackson pollock when it came to placing the dumpsters.

    you dont know when your container came into the yard or which enterance it came in on.

    its 15 minutes to the closing time for the yard and you are 5 minutes away from the containers, you must exit the yard before they close.

    Where is your RC plane?

    On top of all of that, as with all things about the black box, if the pinger works, thats great. The purpose of the black box is to protect the recorded data thats inside the box, if the rest of it is shaken to shrapnel, it doesnt matter just so long as the data survives.
    Yeah, ok<_<.

    Well maybe they need 2, one that floats.

    Happy Days.

  2. #372
    Boony73 Guest
    Quote Originally Posted by joel0407 View Post
    I just don't know why the ping in the black box is so primitive.
    There are differing systems on an aircraft relating to crash position and recording. Early on it was simply an analogue cockpit voice recorder (CVR) that recorded on magnetic tape. Then analogue recording of basic flight data and aircraft systems, flight data recorder, again on magnetic tape. Now cockpit voice recording and flight data recording is incorporated in the one unit and is commonly known as a cockpit data recorder, these units no longer no longer use magnetic tape but solid state recording media and generally around the size of a shoe box and are colored bright orange.
    Crash position is done by a few different systems a crash position indicator, underwater locator beacon and emergency locator beacon. The crash position indicator can be either fixed to the airframe, ejectable on a crash or incorporated within a crash data recorder, most commonly they are mounted in the tail section of the aircraft. The crash position indicators are battery powered and operate automatically, they emit an RF signal through an omni directional antenna. Emergency locator beacons are functionally similar to PLB's and EPIRBS and can be either automatic or manually operated and are also battery powered. You generally see automatically ones in the tail of the aircraft and manual ones in the cockpit. Underwater locator beacons (or pingers) are acoustic transmitters that are almost always attached to the crash data recorders. Acoustic transmitters used because the RF transmitters used in crash position indicators and emergency locator beacons have basically no range underwater. The underwater locator beacons are triggered automatically on immersion in water and transmit an omni-directional signal, they are also battery powered.

  3. #373
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    Quote Originally Posted by Boony73 View Post
    There are differing systems on an aircraft relating to crash position and recording. Early on it was simply an analogue cockpit voice recorder (CVR) that recorded on magnetic tape. Then analogue recording of basic flight data and aircraft systems, flight data recorder, again on magnetic tape. Now cockpit voice recording and flight data recording is incorporated in the one unit and is commonly known as a cockpit data recorder, these units no longer no longer use magnetic tape but solid state recording media and generally around the size of a shoe box and are colored bright orange.
    Crash position is done by a few different systems a crash position indicator, underwater locator beacon and emergency locator beacon. The crash position indicator can be either fixed to the airframe, ejectable on a crash or incorporated within a crash data recorder, most commonly they are mounted in the tail section of the aircraft. The crash position indicators are battery powered and operate automatically, they emit an RF signal through an omni directional antenna. Emergency locator beacons are functionally similar to PLB's and EPIRBS and can be either automatic or manually operated and are also battery powered. You generally see automatically ones in the tail of the aircraft and manual ones in the cockpit. Underwater locator beacons (or pingers) are acoustic transmitters that are almost always attached to the crash data recorders. Acoustic transmitters used because the RF transmitters used in crash position indicators and emergency locator beacons have basically no range underwater. The underwater locator beacons are triggered automatically on immersion in water and transmit an omni-directional signal, they are also battery powered.

    Ok. That's more reasonable. So this plane is just unlucky and nobody can find any signals from these devices. Some times stuff happens.




    Happy Days

  4. #374
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    The R.N. submarine, HMS Tireless, has joined the search, Bob


    BBC News - MH370: Missing plane search 'most challenging ever'
    I’m pretty sure the dinosaurs died out when they stopped gathering food and started having meetings to discuss gathering food

    A bookshop is one of the only pieces of evidence we have that people are still thinking

  5. #375
    SBD4's Avatar
    SBD4 is offline A Keeper of the TGO Gold Subscriber
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    I can't see anything sinister about the last words said by the pilot in this transcript - even if they had been "alright, good night" as originally reported. Just common courtesy.

    bloody media hyper exaggeration again.

    http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/special/20...transcript.pdf
    Cheers,

    Sean

    “Only two things are infinite, the universe and human stupidity, and I'm not sure about the former.” - Albert Einstein

  6. #376
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    Ref; https://www.facebook.com/groups/280998512054916/

    Maldives Halon Fire suppression bottle -Here is a blow up of the Halon bottle found in Maldives
    http://theconservativetreehouse.file...pg?w=640&h=853

    Only the tinyest bit of rust there on top and under the left mounting bracket. In salt water, that is less than <6 days, but more than 5 days of rust evidence.
    Read more here-->MH-370 “The Maldives” | The Last Refuge


    Ref; https://www.modstore.aero/modificati...ss%20steel_70_

    Change cargo fire extinguishers from titantium to stainless steel.

    .

  7. #377
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    Last edited by Lotz-A-Landies; 2nd April 2014 at 11:02 AM. Reason: duplicates merged

  8. #378
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    The authorities would be able to re the numbers on the bottle and cross reference with those fitted to the aircraft - as this has not been picked up on by the sensation seeking media I think it can be dismissed as it is easily checked if it came from the missing aircraft.

    Garry
    REMLR 243

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  9. #379
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    Quote Originally Posted by garrycol View Post
    The authorities would be able to re the numbers on the bottle and cross reference with those fitted to the aircraft - as this has not been picked up on by the sensation seeking media I think it can be dismissed as it is easily checked if it came from the missing aircraft.
    Hi Garry

    I agree that if it hasn't been tampered with it, should be easy for the investigators to positively identify.

    But I came across this information about a bomb on the beach on a pretty dodgy internet site and that object was found to be not a bomb.

    Is it now in the waste dumpster at that Police station? How did it get to a beach in the Maldives in the first place?

    Although some pundits on another forum have spotted that it could be a Halon pressure cylinder. It does look to be the same style as used in the cargo bays of Boeing aircraft.
    .

  10. #380
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    Quote Originally Posted by wrinklearthur View Post
    ...
    Is it now in the waste dumpster at that Police station? How did it get to a beach in the Maldives in the first place?....
    .
    Ocean currents.

    The only (dead) crew from the HMAS Sydney II lost off Canarvon WA in WWII that were ever found, was a single corpse on a carey float found on Christmas Island months later. So likely that there are East-West flowing currents in that part of the Indian Ocean.

    It becoms a possibility for something to get to the Maldives from MH370.

    You won't find me on: faceplant; Scipe; Infragam; LumpedIn; ShapCnat or Twitting. I'm just not that interesting.

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