Kuala Lumpur: More and more experts are now saying they believe the lost MH370 aircraft broke into pieces in air, or on collision with the sea.
Days after the MH370 went missing, former Indonesian President and aviation expert Burhanuddin Habibie said the plane would have broken into pieces, after blowing up in space.
He even estimated that the plane would have been flying low, when it would have blown up into scattered pieces and this would make it almost impossible to locate the aircraft.
Now, another expert from the Aviation Safety Network is putting forward a similar theory, saying he would not rule out the possibility that the ill-fated airliner collided with significant speed and energy before coming to a gory end.
That, it’s reckoned, would have caused it to disintegate into thousands of pieces.
The National Post was quoting Harro Ranter, Founder and Director of Aviation Safety Network, in the Netherlands.
Ranter however thinks that the main wreckage site was still out there somewhere. Larger pieces of the plane, like the engines, would have typically sunk at the location of impact.
“No matter what type of accident, it’s very likely that there will still be remains of wreckage at the accident location,” he said.
06/06/16 The Independent
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Days after the MH370 went missing, former Indonesian President and aviation expert Burhanuddin Habibie said the plane would have broken into pieces, after blowing up in space.
He even estimated that the plane would have been flying low, when it would have blown up into scattered pieces and this would make it almost impossible to locate the aircraft.
Now, another expert from the Aviation Safety Network is putting forward a similar theory, saying he would not rule out the possibility that the ill-fated airliner collided with significant speed and energy before coming to a gory end.
That, it’s reckoned, would have caused it to disintegate into thousands of pieces.
The National Post was quoting Harro Ranter, Founder and Director of Aviation Safety Network, in the Netherlands.
Ranter however thinks that the main wreckage site was still out there somewhere. Larger pieces of the plane, like the engines, would have typically sunk at the location of impact.
“No matter what type of accident, it’s very likely that there will still be remains of wreckage at the accident location,” he said.
06/06/16 The Independent