14 comments

  • hypeatei an hour ago ago

    One of the theories is that Shah waited until his co-pilot went to the bathroom, refused to unlock the door from there, and then de-pressurized the cabin so that they all died which left him as the only person alive on-board.

    I'm sure there has been a lot of thought put into this locking mechanism so that hijackers can't access the cockpit, but how about the rogue pilot scenario like this one? IIRC, pilots outside can enter a code to unlock the door but it can be rejected by the person inside (so it really only applies if they're incapacitated)

    EDIT: it appears some airlines mandate at least two people in the cockpit at all times after the 2015 Germanwings incident.

    • AlotOfReading 24 minutes ago ago

      I thought it was standard procedure to have a flight attendant in the cockpit during bathroom trips since the germanwings disaster to prevent exactly this, until I realized germanwings was after MH370.

  • V__ 2 hours ago ago

    I highly recommend Mentour Pilots videos on the topic, for an indepth introduction to the whole story and the new search:

    https://youtu.be/Y5K9HBiJpuk?si=nsR14R7Fl4Nk4qpO

    https://youtu.be/HIuXEU4H-XE?si=I_ZczAv-VmZT7rQn

  • treesknees 2 hours ago ago

    I’m surprised the article claims there was nothing suspicious about the pilot. I recall that Captain Zaharie Shah had deleted data from his home pc flight simulator that showed a path flying through that same South Indian Ocean.

    • EMM_386 2 hours ago ago

      There was. New York magazine was the first to report this.

      > New York has obtained a confidential document from the Malaysian police investigation into the disappearance of Malaysia Airlines Flight 370 that shows that the plane's captain, Zaharie Ahmad Shah, conducted a simulated flight deep into the remote southern Indian Ocean less than a month before the plane vanished under uncannily similar circumstances.

      • netsharc an hour ago ago

        I've read elsewhere that maybe the cops were finding bits of information (it was just fragment of files, they were not recovered fully) and the whole thing ("He's been planning to fly to the middle of the Indian Ocen!") is just wild speculation backed up with weak "evidence".

        Anyway, it's Malaysian authorities. I've lived in the region...

        But since we're not citing links, this is all gossip...

    • whalesalad 2 hours ago ago

      There is a lot of evidence to suggest the pilot did this intentionally, including the additional fuel and the topping up of the crew oxygen.

      • razakel 44 minutes ago ago

        That still leaves the question of "why?". If he wanted to commit suicide he could have had an "accident" in a light aircraft instead of murdering 238 people, and the entire point of terrorism is for everyone to know it was you.

  • mannyv 30 minutes ago ago

    Nobody seems to have asked the US Navy about the crash. The Indian Ocean is a well-known hangout for boomers, and the USN listening posts should have heard the crash.

  • jmyeet an hour ago ago

    I hope the plane gets found but we've basically known for a decade what happened. We just need to confirm it.

    And that is that upon leaving the airspace of Malaysia into Thailand, the pilot changed course to take the plane over the Indian ocean to commit suicide.

    It's likely the pilot depressurized the cabin as hypoxia would've rendered the crew and passengers so they were unliikely conscious for any of this. Whether this happened before or after the course change is unknown.

    Given the minimal wreckage, it was likely a soft landing in the ocean rather than the pilot succumbing to a medical event. He almost certainly was conscious up until the ocean landing.

    The pilot knew the range and likely chose a part of the Indian Ocean that was remote and deep so the wreckage wouldn't be found as the black boxes would reveal this was intentional and it seemed like he intended his family to get the settlement and life insurance.

    It's unclear if the pilot was aware of the pinging that has narrowed down the location.

  • jmclnx an hour ago ago

    A sad situation all around.

    I am curious, did changes take place due to this event ? Like real-time telemetry for airliners where their location is always available and saved on systems not on the plane.

    I remember during the search the commentators said that was not done because Airlines did not want spend for that.

    • randerson 42 minutes ago ago

      Under the assumption that it was a suicide, there have been changes that resulted from the similar Germanwings incident. Most airlines adopted a policy of requiring at least 2 people in the cabin at all times.

      • aurareturn 35 minutes ago ago

        How does this work if there are only 2 pilots? I’d imagine it’s not cost effective to have a 3rd pilot in cheap short flights.

        Put a flight attendant in there?

        • woofcat 23 minutes ago ago

          Yes that's what they do.