Chile missing C-130 plane: Floating debris found Chile missing C-130 plane: Floating debris found - BBC News
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
 Wizard
					
					
						Supporter
					
					
						Wizard
					
					
						SupporterChile missing C-130 plane: Floating debris found Chile missing C-130 plane: Floating debris found - BBC News
Cheers
Travelrover
Adventure before Dementia
2012 Puma 90 - Black
1999 Td5 110 Ute - White
1996 Tdi 300 Wagon - White
Interesting that satellite information was provided by the USA, and .......Israel. Curious that Israel would have a satellite monitering Antarctic waters. Unless it was a joint project.
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
Kind of like Pine Gap in Oz, Bob. Israel may have had visibility of the satellites at the time the photos were taken, so they were given credit. Just theorising...
 ChatterBox
					
					
						Subscriber
					
					
						ChatterBox
					
					
						SubscriberOr maybe had the photo interpretation 'resources' available to help analyse what must have been a vast amount of satellite data.
Deano
66 SIIA SWB .......73 SIII LWB diesel wgn
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94 Defender 110..95 Defender 130 Ute
96 D1 300TDi.......99 D2 TD5 (current)
04 D2a Td5..........02 Disco 2 V8
 Wizard
					
					
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						Wizard
					
					
						SupporterVery strange. How do you crash a C-130 anywhere, never mind over the ocean?
There are a multitude of ways, but over Drake Passage I would think that weather would be the number one suspect, perhaps resulting in structural failure - the lack of a distress call would suggest something sudden happened.
Or it could be something as simple as an error in altitude resulting in hitting the water. It would not be the first time a flight crew has made a 10,000ft error - I seem to remember a flight from the US west coast to Honolulu many years ago on a dark night descended to 10,000ft and noticed water hitting the windscreen, switched on the landing lights, and found they were skimming the wave tops. I assume that the area where it was lost did not have secondary radar coverage.
Plenty of room for speculation. Going to be difficult to find what happened unless the data recorder is located - do military C-130s actually have one? And that will not be easy to find. This is one of the most difficult bits of ocean there is to do anything. And look how long it took to find the Air France plane in the Atlantic, in a much more benign environment.
John
JDNSW
1986 110 County 3.9 diesel
1970 2a 109 2.25 petrol
 Wizard
					
					
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						Wizard
					
					
						SupporterThis is not a Cessna 172 that old mate went for joy flight in.
It is a well proven military aircraft operated by experienced crews over a well known route. Reports indicate that the weather was clear or they would not of taken off, and it is summer time after all.
Having been personally involved in a crash with loss of life I am the last one to speculate. There is a big difference between speculation and discussion of possibilities. The few reports that are posted seem to indicate that the aircraft hit the water at a high rate of decent, as shown by the fuel tank foam debris. The fuel tanks(several) are located in the wing structure, so the wing would have to disintegrate to release the internal tank foam.
There is no radar coverage in that area, and communication is evidently restricted to HF radio.As I posted: strange! RIP the poor buggers involved.
c-130.jpg
There are so many really simple possibilities, the only answer is "how long is a piece of string?"
Most pilots' greatest fear is an uncontrolled fire of any description onboard. You literally have around 15 mins to get on the ground or ditch the aircraft. It's extremely unlikely that the aircraft will not break up in a ditching in open waters, if not in flight.
Not speculating, but just offering one example of the many possibilities.
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