Moderator: gatso76
Problem with this report is that it was from an Air Comet flight that was flying Lima-Madrid (not behind the AF flight).Hurricane wrote:Spanish newspaper EL MUNDO reported that a crew flying just behind the AF-flight saw a bright white light falling down the sky for 6 secondes around the time of the disappearing, believed to be the AF plane
(for me this indicates that it is very likely that the plane cought fire and went burning from cruise alt. into the ocean, after the fire and the impact on the water i'm not supriced that noting is found so far, every part of the a/c shatters to dust, as sad IMHO)
The Emeraude nuclear submarine is enroute to the search area and will arrive next week.Rockville wrote:According to French media, France will dispatch a nuclear submarine to the search area.
PARIS - The French Air Force has contributed two Atlantique 2 maritime patrol aircraft, an AWACs airborne radar plane, and a Falcon 50 in the search for traces of flight 447
Exactly what I think. Something (severe turbulence? lightning strike?) must have damaged the A/C so bad that it's design ultimate load must have been exceeded by a big margin.A plane going down with extensive structural damage on the other hand, could produce this series of messages it seems...
By reading all this information and given the fact that this flight ran into an area with thunderstorms it leaves me under the impression it must have been subject to microburst or something equally violent. However im not willing nor able to draw conclusions these are just my thoughts about this tragic accident. According to dutch teletext a German plane suffered severe enroute turbulence a few hours before on roughly the same route.Thermal wrote:Exactly what I think. Something (severe turbulence? lightning strike?) must have damaged the A/C so bad that it's design ultimate load must have been exceeded by a big margin.A plane going down with extensive structural damage on the other hand, could produce this series of messages it seems...
Unreal.
Thunderstorms alone are not able to cause this amount of trouble, the other airline that ran into trouble was an LH 744 going from GRU-FRA but he came in severe turbulance a few days prior to the AF flight, not hoursPete wrote:By reading all this information and given the fact that this flight ran into an area with thunderstorms it leaves me under the impression it must have been subject to microburst or something equally violent. However im not willing nor able to draw conclusions these are just my thoughts about this tragic accident. According to dutch teletext a German plane suffered severe enroute turbulence a few hours before on roughly the same route.Thermal wrote:Exactly what I think. Something (severe turbulence? lightning strike?) must have damaged the A/C so bad that it's design ultimate load must have been exceeded by a big margin.A plane going down with extensive structural damage on the other hand, could produce this series of messages it seems...
Unreal.
Regards Pete
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