U_of_I_Tweak
Well-Known Member
Takes 10 "Attaboy"s to erase one "Aws**t".
You have to start somewhere...
Sent from my DROID RAZR
Takes 10 "Attaboy"s to erase one "Aws**t".
A fan -mounted EMU is shown
Given historical hijacking, someone with intricate knowledge of the 777 hijacked this airplane, or at least knew certain systems had to be off... having pilots hijack the plane is hardly a stretch given recent eventsMy latest theory:
- copilot or pilot were 'magic the gathering' type(s), and wanted to recreate the miniseries "Lost".
- discuss
That made a lot more sense once I saw a picture… (their site should probably really say "fan shroud-mounted")
EHM and ACARs via SACOM both need a/c power to transmit. That is what I'm hearing from one of our senior engineers. This whole ACARS and EHM news has been the topic of the day around the hangar.The control would be to look at what the data stream and data logging looks like looks like when an aircraft crashes. At this point, I don't think the aircraft continued flying for four hours as suggested.
He should send a letter to Dr. Phil.You have to start somewhere...
Sent from my DROID RAZR
When the Malaysian authorities speak, the only thing missing is the Benny Hill theme song. The plane's over here. No, it's over there. All contact was lost at 1 AM. No, the engines transmitted data for another four hours. It's in the South China Sea. No, it's in the Indian Ocean.
If over 200 people didn't lose their lives, it'd be funny.
(Reuters) - Communications satellites picked up faint electronic pulses from Malaysian Airlines Flight 370 after it went missing on Saturday, but the signals gave no indication about where the stray jet was heading nor its technical condition, a source close to the investigation said on Thursday.
The "pings" equated to an indication that the aircraft's maintenance troubleshooting systems were ready to communicate with satellites if needed, but no links were opened because Malaysia Airlines and others had not subscribed to the full troubleshooting service, the source said.
Batteries.So @inigo88 I'm trying to digest all this info. WRT the SATCOM, the system had power, and the antennae was in a position to have a link to the satellite system, but no data was transmitting for 4 hrs. Any idea what powers this system (and don't say electricity)?
So @inigo88 I'm trying to digest all this info. WRT the SATCOM, the system had power, and the antennae was in a position to have a link to the satellite system, but no data was transmitting for 4 hrs. Any idea what powers this system (and don't say electricity)?
So @inigo88 I'm trying to digest all this info. WRT the SATCOM, the system had power, and the antennae was in a position to have a link to the satellite system, but no data was transmitting for 4 hrs. Any idea what powers this system (and don't say electricity)?