The story behind the final report
released by the Australian Transport Safety Bureau following the
three-and-a-half year search for Malaysian Airlines 370 makes fascinating
reading to anyone interested in aviation safety. The volume actually reads
almost like a good mystery novel with page after page of evidence, opinions and
insights. The difference, of course, is that most people know how this 440-page
book ends.
The reasons for the loss of MH370,
according to the ATSB, “cannot be established with certainty until the aircraft
is found. It is almost inconceivable and certainly societally unacceptable in
the modern aviation era, with 10 million passengers boarding commercial
aircraft every day, for a large commercial aircraft to be missing and for the
world not to know with certainty what became of the aircraft and those on
board.”
On March 8, 2014, a Boeing 777 aircraft
operated as Malaysia Airlines flight 370 (MH370) disappeared during a flight
from Kuala Lumpur to Beijing in the People’s Republic of China. The aircraft
carrying a crew of 12 and 227 passengers was never found. All radio
communications from MH370 ceased 38 minutes after takeoff, although data showed
the aircraft continued to fly for an additional seven hours. The Boeing’s
transponder and ACARS, both designed to transmit aircraft position information,
failed for reasons that were never determined.
Bits of debris from MH370 were found in
2015 and 2016 on the shores of some Indian Ocean Islands, as well as the east
coast of Africa. This information was used to backtrack and create a possible
last location of the aircraft to narrow the search that eventually covered
roughly 46,000 sq. miles of sea floor. As a point of reference, in 15 minutes
of flight, an airliner cruising at 8 NM per minute could be anywhere within a
125 NM radius circle equating to an area of 65,000 sq. miles.
The search for MH370 consumed 1,046 days
until January of this year when the search was suspended by a tripartite
decision of government officials from Malaysia, Australia and the People’s
Republic of China.
Following years of agonizing search
efforts, the loss of MH370 focused aviation authorities on the tracking
equipment installed on similar aircraft. The ATSB said, “Requirements and
systems for tracking aircraft have been enhanced and will continue to be
enhanced. Steps are being taken to advance other aircraft systems including
emergency locator transponders and flight recorder locator beacons.” Today,
three-and-a-half years after the loss of MH370, with equipment available, not
all airlines around the world subscribe to the tracking services necessary to
prevent the loss of another aircraft in a manner similar to what happened to
MH370, although again many have plans in place.
Other Stories Detailed in the Report
The 440-page
report offers deep insights into the efforts, the
methodology and the incredible amount of resources used to try and locate the
aircraft during those three years. It also opens the door on more than a few
mysteries surrounding the crash, such as the rumors about the captain’s flight simulator
activities.
The report said simulator data retrieved
from a flight conducted a month before the aircraft disappeared showed a
B777-200LR eventually tracking northwest along the Strait of Malacca climbing
to FL400. The flight later made a left turn to a southwest and proceeded
southwest into the southern Indian Ocean, although it eventually flew 4,200 nm,
beyond the range of MH370 that night.
The Boeing 777 in the simulator overflew
points of reference that were not the same as those created with the limited
data available through Inmarsat communication links. While the pilot’s
performance on his home simulator could hardly be considered conclusive, “There
were enough similarities to the flight path of MH370 for the ATSB to carefully
consider the possible implications for the underwater search area. These
considerations included the impact on the search area if the aircraft had been
either glided after fuel exhaustion or ditched under power prior to fuel
exhaustion with active control of the aircraft from the cockpit.”
(Evangle Luo of TTFLY shared with you)
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