A new report suggests the missing
Malaysia Airlines Boeing 777 made its first off-course turn to the west after a
heading change was entered into the aircraft’s flight computer, a move that
requires advanced knowledge of the plane’s flight systems
The
New York Times has revealed that the missing Malaysia Airlines airliner first
deviated from its set flight path following an entry into its flight computer,
according to a new report.
The
New York Times,
citing “senior American officials,” reports Flight MH370’s first unexpected
turn to the west was made “through a computer system” in the aircraft’s
cockpit. That revelation is significant because changing the aircraft’s route
via the flight computer requires a more intimate understanding of the Boeing
777’s flight systems than manually manipulating the control yoke to change
heading.
According
to The New York Times, commercial jets and other large aircraft typically
travel the skies via a system of waypoints, each identified by a five-character
code. Those waypoints are manually entered into an aircraft’s flight computer
so the airplane’s autopilot system can fly the desired route. Pilots can insert
new waypoints into an aircraft’s flight computer to change the aircraft’s
course midflight if asked to do so by an air-traffic controller or for other
reasons.
The Times report
suggests that someone on board the aircraft did indeed enter a new waypoint
into Flight MH370’s computer. However, it remains unclear whether the waypoint
change was made before or after the flight began.
The Wall
Street Journal reported last
week that data from the aircraft indicated “someone made a manual change in the
plane’s direction.” That report, though, didn’t specify whether someone on
board the plane had made a change in the aircraft’s flight computer or used the
aircraft’s yoke to change its direction.
Flight
MH370 has been missing since disappearing from radar screens on March 8,
triggering a huge search operation that currently involves 26 nations. Many
theories have been considered to explain why the plane would go so drastically
off course in the absence of much solid evidence.
When News Breaks Out, We Break In. Minute by Minute Report on Cameroon and Africa
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.