Center_Mid
Well-Known Member
Re: Hot: Air France Jet Missing
Great point. This leads to the question of whether the time stamp on the receiving party's end would reflect the moment when the event occurred or the moment when the message was transmitted. In other words, if the event occurred at 12:00:01 and there was a five-second transmission delay, would the time stamp received on the ground read 12:00:01 or 12:00:06?
Another consideration for the timing of messages: Just because they were sent at different times, does not mean they occurred at different times.
If the ACARS sent one, then lost connections, the second may have been in Queue awaiting for a connection to transmit the message. I'm not sure if the messages will have a time stamp from the maintenance computer when the malfunction was encountered.
However, if the aircraft was having problems communicating on HF, they were probably out of VHF range and the ACARS would be using either HF (which was not terribly reliable if you can't transmit voice over it) or SATCOM, either way, it was probably searching for a connection.
Then again, one might have happened and led to a downline cause of the other....
The more you look at it, the more questions arise, and I have a very high doubt that many, if any at all, will be answered.
Great point. This leads to the question of whether the time stamp on the receiving party's end would reflect the moment when the event occurred or the moment when the message was transmitted. In other words, if the event occurred at 12:00:01 and there was a five-second transmission delay, would the time stamp received on the ground read 12:00:01 or 12:00:06?