‘MH370 plunged rapidly, not ready for landing’

(FILES) This file photo taken on April 13, 2014 from a Royal New Zealand Airforce (RNZAF) P-3K2-Orion aircraft shows a crew member helping to look for objects during the search for missing Malaysia Airlines flight MH370 off Perth.  Investigators will deploy an underwater vehicle to take a closer look at objects found during a sonar survey of the southern Indian Ocean in the hunt for MH370, Australia said on November 2, 2016, as it extended the search into next year. / AFP PHOTO / POOL / GREG WOOD

 

Sydney /AFP

Flight MH370 was likely out of control when it plunged into the ocean with its wing flaps not prepared for landing, a new report said on Wednesday, casting doubt on theories a pilot was still in charge.
Malaysia Airlines Boeing 777 disappeared en route from Kuala Lumpur to Beijing on March 8, 2014 carrying 239 passengers and crew.
The report by the Australian Transport Safety Bureau found the plane’s final satellite communications were “consistent with the aircraft being in a high and increasing rate of descent” when it vanished.
Analysis of the right outboard flap—which was found off Tanzania—showed it was “most likely in the retracted position”, suggesting the plane was not configured for landing before it smashed into the ocean.
The new finding casts doubt on theories proposed by some analysts that a pilot had been flying the plane when it landed in the sea.
“You can draw your own conclusions,” the ATSB’s head of MH370 search operations Peter Foley told reporters, adding that the new findings showed “we’re looking for an aircraft that’s actually quite close to the seventh arc.”
The search zone—defined under the “most likely” scenario that no one was at the controls as the jet ran out of fuel —is a thin, long stretch of water within the so-called seventh arc, where the plane was calculated to have emitted a final satellite “handshake” showing its location.
“This report contains important new information on what we believe happened at the end of MH370’s flight,” Australia’s Transport Minister Darren Chester said at the start of a three-day meeting in Canberra where experts will plan the final stages of the search.
Despite a massive underwater hunt far off Western Australia’s coast, no trace of the jet has been found.
Investigators have however confirmed that three pieces of debris recovered along western Indian Ocean shorelines came from MH370.
More than 110,000 square kilometres (42,470 square miles) of a 120,000-square-kilometre search arc have been scoured so far and the operation is due to wrap up in early 2017.
Experts at this week’s meeting will “review all the available data and analysis associated with the search to date”, Chester said in a statement.

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