Well, in a sense he's right - it's called dead reckoning, and it works pretty well. The key in this case is that he could ignore the takeoff and climb to altitude (which are relatively difficult to do that way) and assume that the pilot was flying the airspeed he demanded and on course by the time the plane made the 30 degree left turn at MALAY, and start timing from there.
I have read, however, that the pilot felt he was not on course at that point - what does your research show? It's believable - the Victor airways are low-altitude routes, which the pilots would not follow normally. In fact, they may not have had the correct charts for those routes, although they likely would have.
Hey Adnoid:
Good point. Actually, Cooper is the smartest guy I've met (before you, of course) related to aviation, so, he may be right. Plus, along that route are some fantastic visual references, including Mt st helens, i-5, Lake Merwin, and the Lewis River. Of course, assuming, just one break in the clouds.
Thing is, according to the various research, he wasn't able to get the aftstairs down until about 8:03pm, 10 minutes before he jumped. IF that is correct, wouldn't the airplane would have been past the Malay?
However, like I have mentioned before, Cooper grew up in the POrtland area, had been flying for 20 years, and probably had memorized the distances between landmarks. Just like we know memorize distances between landmarks on familar highways, Cooper had equal knowledge of the Portland area.
That is why, in my opinion, that Cooper chose to have that plane divert to Seattle, its' original destination, and he jumped just north of Portland, an area that he knew like the back of his hand.
My only point was that if he pulled this off solo, which I believe he did, if that pilot was off course, say 2 or 3 miles, and he couldn't see the ground, how was he planning on getting to his vehicle, and what if he landed close to houses, etc.
Actually, you are helping me prove that the jump was not as difficult as everyone believes it was. I can't really go into Cooper's background, or it will give it away, but, there is nobody who would have been more prepared for that jump, that anyone I have run across in my life. Given his expertise in skydiving, a pilot for 20 years, and being a mechanic.
The FBI agent assigned to this case was quoted as saying there was "no way Cooper could have known where he was when he jumped, and that he just bailed out whenever he could get the stairs down". And you wonder why the case is unsolved? Isn't that like saying a bank robber goes into a bank without a plan, exits the bank, and has no plan on which streets to take, where to park a switch car, etc? Or like sending our astronauts to the moon, and not having a plan on how to return them through the atmosphere, and back to earth.
AS for charts, when the plane was refueling in Seattle, the pilot ordered navigational charts since he was not familar with the low aviation route. THE FAA also sent out meals for the crew, at Cooper's request. What a gentleman!!!
Once again, thanks Adnoid.
left
As for the pilot saying he was off course, I wouldn't put any faith in that statement.
First of all, the FBI reviewed radar reports before their search, as well as debriefing the pilots and crew. In cases like this, you here all types of reports.
One report says the pilot, William Scott thought Cooper jumped over Lake Merwin, and another states the pilot said he was off course and west of I-5.
Thing is, Lake Merwin is at least 5 miles east of v-23, and the pilot said he couldn't see the ground and he was unfamilar with the route.
However, Cooper, with the aftstairs down, would have a much better view of the drop zone, than a pilot in the cockpit of a 727. imo