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ladywnch

(2,672 posts)
7. there was something posted yesterday about the limitations of the beacons
Sun Mar 9, 2014, 01:42 PM
Mar 2014

I don't remember all of it but things that affect them:

distance - they' re not sure exactly where they're looking yet.....thousands of square miles of ocean

water - if the boxes are in the water it will inhibit the signal

time - the signal weakens over time (although they don't say how much time that takes)

That's as best I can remember

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For the victims' sakes, I pray that it happened instantaneously LiberalEsto Mar 2014 #1
This story is sounding more and more like a Bermuda Triangle type of incident - too weird, Hestia Mar 2014 #2
More likely a terrorist bomb! LongTomH Mar 2014 #6
Yes, but they will find them through the stolen passports, and photos they have of them lostincalifornia Mar 2014 #27
I don't understand this.... Uben Mar 2014 #3
there was something posted yesterday about the limitations of the beacons ladywnch Mar 2014 #7
That's what's had me puzzled. And the black box can take almost anything. Should be able to find it. freshwest Mar 2014 #8
I read somewhere that one of the passenger's cell phone rings Uben Mar 2014 #10
Well, they short out if they get wet. Being unable to get through would mean the passenger is sadly, freshwest Mar 2014 #18
The transposer signal has distance limits... brooklynite Mar 2014 #13
Well, there was this that I'd hoped would narrow the area: freshwest Mar 2014 #19
That made it worse... brooklynite Mar 2014 #33
I've seen video at air shows where planes can do amazing things. Like this one in Afghanistan: freshwest Mar 2014 #34
Transposer? What's that? :>) pangaia Mar 2014 #26
really Jeneral2885 Mar 2014 #11
Just heard on tv.... Uben Mar 2014 #17
EVERY commercial plane in the world has a transponder. pangaia Mar 2014 #28
I heard on CNN.... CherokeeDem Mar 2014 #15
Black boxes and ELTs... ewagner Mar 2014 #24
Yes, they work under water. pangaia Mar 2014 #30
Wouldn't that leave a very large debris field? B2G Mar 2014 #4
Ripping apart at 35,000 feet at 500mph go west young man Mar 2014 #5
The Challenger 'disintegrated' & some pieces recovered were large. Sunlei Mar 2014 #21
Demonstrably incorrect Bosonic Mar 2014 #31
That's what it sounds like. They were at 35,000 feet, so if a fire started, or a piece of the jtuck004 Mar 2014 #22
Ugh...another incident to add to incidents that stick in my brain to this day. SoapBox Mar 2014 #9
The Vietnamese think they've found some wreckage in the vicinity of the oil slicks. ColesCountyDem Mar 2014 #12
Like a cabin door floating... SoapBox Mar 2014 #14
NPR says the debris was not a match to the plane. Agschmid Mar 2014 #36
What if it was successfully hijacked.??? If the cell phone story is true its location Gin Mar 2014 #16
expected a couple seconds contact from the crew if it went down even partly intact. Sunlei Mar 2014 #20
That's my thinking, too. Gumboot Mar 2014 #23
The lack of mass debris is odd... SoapBox Mar 2014 #25
That has me puzzled, too. Something 840high Mar 2014 #29
Not necessarily... brooklynite Mar 2014 #37
So as it entered the 35,000 range the plane lost structural integrity? freshwest Mar 2014 #32
Hope everyone's safe on The Island and Hugo just failed to enter 4, 8, 15, 16, 23, 42 ... brett_jv Mar 2014 #35
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