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  MH370 plunged into sea at 20,000 feet a minute

MH370 plunged into sea at 20,000 feet a minute

AFP
Published : Aug 10, 2016, 6:24 am IST
Updated : Aug 10, 2016, 6:24 am IST

Missing MH370 plunged into the ocean at high speed — up to 20,000 feet a minute — reinforcing analysis that the missing Malaysia Airlines jet crashed in the current search zone, a report said on Tuesd

Missing MH370 plunged into the ocean at high speed — up to 20,000 feet a minute — reinforcing analysis that the missing Malaysia Airlines jet crashed in the current search zone, a report said on Tuesday. The Boeing 777 disappeared on March 8, 2014 en route from Kuala Lumpur to Beijing with 239 people onboard.

An extensive underwater hunt in the southern Indian Ocean has not yet found the crash site, fuelling speculation it may be outside the current search zone, particularly if someone was at the controls. A manned plane could have been glided down, allowing it to enter the water outside the 120,000 square kilometre (46,000 square mile) area being searched, some experts have suggested.

But testing by Boeing and fresh Australian defence department suggest that — regardless of the possible actions of one or both of the pilots — the jet dived into the ocean at high speed, The Australian reported.

Once MH370 ran out of fuel and the engines flamed, it slowed before plunging down towards the water in a series of swoops — dropping from 35,000 feet at a rate of between 12,000 feet a minute and 20,000 feet a minute, Boeing said.

The sharp dive was confirmed by new data analysis by Australia’s defence department involving signals sent automatically between the plane and a satellite, the head of the agency leading the MH370 hunt said.

Australian Transport and Safety Bureau chief Greg Hood said this supported the view MH370 “was likely to have crashed in the 1,20,000 square kilometre area now being searched,” the paper said.

Parts of the plane have been recovered on islands across the Pacific.

Location: Australia, New South Wales, Sydney