Only 1 plausible scenario
Based on the flightradar24 data I concluded the following: The plane disintegrated. The reason for this is as follows:
1) The flightradar data had per minute information. There was no descend of any sort visible at the time of disappearance. This means the plane's ability to be tracked ended abruptly. no time for descent and for larger pieces to be tracked by passive radars.
2) The lack of debris indicates that debris of the plane broke up into small enough pieces to be missed by passive radar. This is actually quite a frightening thought. What can pulverise an airplane? The fact that nothing "large" is found yet can only indicate this was a huge event.
3) No mayday/distress and loss of comms.
The mysteries:
- Why can't the locator beacons of the black boxes be picked up around the last known location?
- Why can't even small pieces of debris be located around the perimeter of last known location?
- If there is a cover-up. why?
- How can technology that is designed to keep track, loose track?
- How can a large populated area of vessels not notice either an explotion or debris falling from the sky.
- Can an airplane dip below radar signals in such a short time to fly underneath it to another location?
So the plane either catastrophically disintegrated into so man pieces that the scattering is very broad, or there is a dark sinister piece of information we are not aware of. but it cannot be possible to loose a plane when all the location data is available. Frustrating to say the least.
Based on the flightradar24 data I concluded the following: The plane disintegrated. The reason for this is as follows:
1) The flightradar data had per minute information. There was no descend of any sort visible at the time of disappearance. This means the plane's ability to be tracked ended abruptly. no time for descent and for larger pieces to be tracked by passive radars.
2) The lack of debris indicates that debris of the plane broke up into small enough pieces to be missed by passive radar. This is actually quite a frightening thought. What can pulverise an airplane? The fact that nothing "large" is found yet can only indicate this was a huge event.
3) No mayday/distress and loss of comms.
The mysteries:
- Why can't the locator beacons of the black boxes be picked up around the last known location?
- Why can't even small pieces of debris be located around the perimeter of last known location?
- If there is a cover-up. why?
- How can technology that is designed to keep track, loose track?
- How can a large populated area of vessels not notice either an explotion or debris falling from the sky.
- Can an airplane dip below radar signals in such a short time to fly underneath it to another location?
So the plane either catastrophically disintegrated into so man pieces that the scattering is very broad, or there is a dark sinister piece of information we are not aware of. but it cannot be possible to loose a plane when all the location data is available. Frustrating to say the least.
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