Roselvr
Ask me how to get your loved one in NamUs
I don't buy this scenario that the pilot just decided to off himself and the passengers by flying off into the wild blue yonder. Did anyone ever find out if other pilots do "test runs" with simulators in their own homes? Just looked on line and there are so many "games" to practice flying with out there that anyone could access and learn from.
I question why this "new" info just happened to be released after a meeting was held to suspend the search when the last grid is completed? Was it a way to try to "calm the waters" for the surviving families so they wouldn't get too upset with ending the search?
I just wish they would hurry up and find this plane. Then maybe the surviving families and we could get some real answers.
I said the same thing about other pilots with SIMS. I found this in the article you posted.
Captain Desmond Ross, an aviation expert with three decades experience as a pilot, agrees there has been a distinct lack of transparency and says that many pilots plot unusual courses on home flight simulators for legitimate reasons. I think there is a lot of information being withheld from the investigation, he says. Im sure the Malaysians are withholding information. ....
.... The current search area was based on data analysis by U.K. satellite firm Inmarsat, which has admitted its unprecedented calculation was merely an estimate and couldnt be corroborated. Captain Ross says thinks investigators should have handled the investigation in the time-honored fashion and started the search from the last definite point of contact. I dont think they are searching in the correct area, he says. And I dont believe the suicide theory at all. But its politically convenient.
Now, the Malaysian police have dismissed the latest media reports that the pilot was on a suicidal flight and said that the report was not true.
http://time.com/4421357/malaysia-ai...-suicide-evidence-captain-zaharie-ahmad-shah/
Steve Wang, whose mother was on the plane is quoted in the article, he's very disappointed they suspended the search saying all 3 countries promised they'd never stop. He also says all of the next of kin doubt the location is correct. To me, suspending it for right now makes more sense, especially if they're going to try to go over everything to see if there is another option.
From your link -
The route and destination of the simulated flight was similar to the route investigators believe the plane took.
We found a flight path, that led to the southern Indian Ocean, among the numerous other flight paths charted on the flight simulator, that could be of interest, the document said, according to New York magazine.
However, Malaysian Police Inspector-General Tan Sri Khalid Abu Bakar told local media Saturday that no information had been passed onto investigators in the U.S., where the magazine said it obtained the document.
We have never submitted such a report to any authority abroad including the FBI, he said, according to the Malay Mail. This report is not true.


