🟢 Like this video, and want to see more like it? Join the Patreon! www.patreon.com/GreenDotAviation To clear up some confusion I'm seeing in the comments section, here is the evidence supporting the theory in this video (see sources in the video description): - The flight disappeared from radar at the exact moment that it passed IGARI, the Transfer-of-Control point (TCP) between Malaysia and HCM ATC. This timing is an extraordinary coincidence if what happened was an accident, as it was one of only a few moments during the entire flight during which nobody on the ground was watching it. - The ADS-B data from a Malaysian ATC radar at Terengganu shows two datapoints for MH370 where there was position information being sent from that plane's transponder, but no altitude information. This is consistent with the transponder being manually turned off, with the switch passing through the 'ALT OFF' position. - The aircraft did not descend towards an alternate airport at any stage. - The plane turned multiple times in the hour since the emergency began. This is entirely inconsistent with an incapacitated crew scenario. - The First Officer's phone registered with a cell tower on Penang at 0152 MYT. It is unlikely that his phone was on, or at least, not on flight mode while the plane was on the ground, given that this was a very important training flight for him. This suggests he turned on his phone at some point during the flight. - Despite the extreme nature of any failure sequence required to incapacitate the crew, and disable all of the highly-redundant communications systems (ACARS, SATCOM, VHF radios), the aircraft remained aloft for over 6 hours after first disappearing from radar. - The SDU came back online at 0225 MYT after being off since IGARI. There are few, if any failure scenarios in which this would happen. - The captain's home computer had a flight simulator route dating from the month before the disappearance, which involved a Boeing 777 flying from the strait of Malacca to the middle of the SIO, where it experienced fuel exhaustion. - Despite having 10 years to come up with a plausible accident scenario, nobody has proffered one. The 'intentional diversion' scenario described in this video, was proposed mere days after the plane's disappearance, and no evidence which has emerged since, has lessened its likelihood. In fact, the evidence for this scenario has only gotten stronger in this time. The logical conclusion to draw from the above, is that the Captain of this flight orchestrated its disappearance. Here is some informed supposition, based on the above evidence: - The First Officer was asked to leave the cockpit at some point before the plane reached IGARI, and he was then locked out. - The captain depressurised the aircraft to prevent the passengers and crew from revolting - The captain turned off the plane's external lights to prevent sightings of the aircraft (this is an obvious logical step if you accept that he turned off the transponder) - The First Officer tried to regain entry - The First officer used a portable oxygen bottle in order to stay conscious while attempting to re-gain entry - The First Officer kept his phone in his pocket, turned it on after he couldn't gain entry to the cockpit, and tried to make a call - The captain listened out on ATC frequencies to see whether authorities were aware of what was happening the flight. - Once he was sure everybody on board was incapacitated, the captain repressurised the plane and turned back on the SATCOM (as indicated by the SDU logon at 0225 MYT) - The Captain depressurised the plane once he knew he was no longer needed in the cockpit. I hope this clears up some of the confusion in the comments.
@Notmq99 Жыл бұрын
Yo I watched the show and this video is so good, fantastic job GreenDotAviation!
@Aviationcollects Жыл бұрын
The fact that the aircraft was 9M-MRO and it’s made in 2002
@dolandump Жыл бұрын
Who asked for the pilots' oxygen cylinders to be refilled? Who knew that the software did not indicate the position transmitted by the aircraft, but an extrapolated position? This guy had 18,000 flying hours! Why would he do this? I've watched the video several times this week. Incredible work!
@dolandump Жыл бұрын
@@Aviationcollects I don't get it. Why is this important?
@Aviationcollects Жыл бұрын
@@dolandump ik but the plane crash was a mass murder suicide plot
@OSHEEN9 ай бұрын
Can't believe I watched this for free yet have to pay Netflix to what their pathetic documentary.
@alonewithalones7 ай бұрын
I don’t sub to Netflix because it’s shit.
@vannahmae74135 ай бұрын
The Netflix doc is actually really good
@AbyssalSoda5 ай бұрын
Ironically this documentary is even more speculative than the Netflix one I believe they're referencing, as this is essentially not a documentary but a retelling of hypothetical events with cherry picked information as opposed to a spread of information that creates conflicting suspicions.
@effie91405 ай бұрын
@@AbyssalSodathis is the most credible theory.
@coronaboy8795 ай бұрын
Basically did what Netflix did. Blamed the pilot but put more sauce into it. No one knows what happened until the plane is actually found. Theory’s will remain theory’s.
@tens0r88411 ай бұрын
The fact that we had, for some hours, a literal flying morgue over the desolate pacific with no pilot is the eeriest thing ever
@famo750311 ай бұрын
If that were true then yeah.. however, it’s just another theory, there’s no proof he did it.. a majority of the things this KZbinr says that point to the pilot doing it are just made up. Like the pilot telling the FO to get him coffee and the FO trying to open the cockpit door, where the hell is the evidence for this? This KZbinr is taking everyone here for a ride, acting like he seen what went on inside the plane lol. This is nothing more than a bedtime story. I will give him this this tho, makes good for creative writing.
@pedroknapp11 ай бұрын
@@famo7503fr i watched all the video thinking there were new proof released and everything, or he would show a font but bro, he made almost everything up and it’s just another theory, like…
@MegCazalet11 ай бұрын
That horrific Helios “ghost flight” where everyone was unconscious but one flight attendant, and fighter jets trying to escort it could see him struggling in the cockpit through the windows really messed me up. He was a hero - he was no pilot, but alone and knowing he couldn’t land the plane, that it was going to inevitably crash, the plane away from crashing into the Athens area and it crashed in a field.
@toziassmitt11 ай бұрын
@@famo7503so, id love to know how it ended up over the Pacific Ocean, in your opinion then. What sort of “error” makes a plane turn 180 degrees, skirt all along the national air territories, and then fly away from any land mass. Let’s hear it, genius. Give me occams razor…. All this without even mentioning that they found the EXACT PATH on zaharie’s flight simulator. So much “coincidence”, huh
@rpgeek2211 ай бұрын
The coffee idea is a theory based on fact though. The chance it wasn't a murder suicide is just so microscopic. The pilot flew the flight in a simulator prepping for it, he filled the oxygen tank that same day, he did the flyby of his hometown. All of the evidence points towards it being a murder suicide. @@famo7503
@limlianhui946211 ай бұрын
My friend’s dad was onboard. In the end, he’s never coming back to his family, not in this life, as is everyone else onboard this plane, no matter whether we end up finding the wreckage or not. I really feel for her mum, she has said many, many times that even a tiny fragment of bone would be enough for her to lay him to rest. She may never get her wish and it is very hard to see her struggle with such an ambiguous loss like this.
@Muchjoy..11 ай бұрын
💜
@emilybrennan453711 ай бұрын
So very sorry.
@GingeRenee11 ай бұрын
That’s sad. To not have any closure is hard when it’s a loved one,
@tbrockton35611 ай бұрын
He is at rest. What is buried in the ground is not where a loved one rests. The energy and spirit leaves the body and what's left behind is an empty shell, the vehicle in which we travel around when we are alive. When we pass on we can still be around those we love because our spirit lives on. I wish the mum could find peace in knowing that her loved one is with her, standing by her every day. The suffering of those who have passed does not continue each day like it does for family and friends left behind. There's no such thing as closure. we must allow ourselves to mourn the loss of a loved one each day as it comes upon them but it must be put into a box and set aside to mourn again the following day. It cannot be your whole life for the remainder of your life. It is a process and being able to set aside those sad feelings after allowing youreself to mourn for a period of time each day will help you to reach a point where you are living and your loved one would not want you to stop living. God bless the friends and relatives who lost someone on that flight.
@REBECCA1234111 ай бұрын
@@tbrockton356don't go to Euphrates River when gold gets up
@rachelle.alexis26 күн бұрын
As a person with ADHD, I can’t focus on anything for more than a few minutes. Your storytelling is so compelling, I was glued to the screen with almost no breaks, definitely 10000x better than Netflix’s version. Bravo 👏🏼
@emadpi73488 күн бұрын
I watched it at 5:30 in the morning 😅
@niviamaeva8 күн бұрын
Me too. Very rarely I watch anything longer than 10 min but was able to watch it entirely (although reading the comments at the same time 😅)
@calsrestarea4 күн бұрын
I'm not diagnosed with ADHD but I've always had difficulties doing the same thing since I was little and yes I agree with you! What a great video
@cnydo3 күн бұрын
Not related but chess is very worth trying for ADHD people
@Marie-i4r5bКүн бұрын
Yes,me too..I
@BrightSunFilms Жыл бұрын
Well done with this video! it’s actually extremely well told and makes the whole story a lot more disturbing. Ironically, so much better than the Netflix show with tons of money behind it.
@teo2975 Жыл бұрын
It is very very well done. I think a lot of us are sick and tired of the redherrings and strawman arguments, conspiracy theories etc. As this video shows literally everything that occurred is completely consistent with pilot intentionally killing everyone. Everything we know about the flight path, and technical aspects points to this conclusion and all other alternate theories have some major problems that are just ignored when people proffer those alternate theories. The fact that none of us *want* it to be a mass murder by the pilot doesn't change the fact that this is what it was. Netflix ought to be ashamed or its shoddy and pandering "documentary" and I am grateful for this extremely sober alternative
@av_oid Жыл бұрын
Sky News Australia did a documentary about a year ago, with the same basic theory and interviewing multiple experts.
@@av_oidyour grammar...also isn't sky News Australia a right wing news Network similar to that of fox news
@cbsundance Жыл бұрын
@@railfandepotproductions far better than a left wing nut case network like the MSM.
@Myrea_Rend Жыл бұрын
When a KZbinr with a flight sim is making better videos than "proper" TV producers, something's gone wrong with the latter.
@martindunstan8043 Жыл бұрын
Agreed, it's not about content standard anymore for high flying(accidental pun) executive producers and well established TV companies, it's only about the money where service and even truth sometimes are irrelevant to them. This channel clearly has a sense of accuracy with the detailed investigative nature and isn't financially or narratively driven in my opinion.
@tian901 Жыл бұрын
this is better than that 'show' on netflix right?
@thisisanexcellenthandle Жыл бұрын
Agreed, but it also shows how dedicated the former is as well
@TheOddHog Жыл бұрын
Yeah that “documentary” totally wasn’t biased at all
@eddycarpenter8989 Жыл бұрын
TV producers have to create content that appeals to a broad audience, including those who may not have any interest in aviation or are not familiar with the MH370 case. This channel's style is more focused on niche aviation audiences, allowing for a more detailed and granular analysis compared to what might be found on TV or Netflix.
@serunato9 ай бұрын
this story is one that never fails to disturb me no matter how many times i hear it.. just the imagery of the pilot flying the plane knowing he has over 200 people dead behind him is so eerie
@rickjames59989 ай бұрын
well we dont know if thats true. So they could have all died together at the same time. or... are still alive.
@serunato9 ай бұрын
@@rickjames5998 im aware but the possibility of that being the case is still haunting also i think the likelihood that they hadnt crashed into the ocean is non existent lol since they found some of the parts theyre def all dead
@Supulam-z8l8 ай бұрын
@@rickjames5998the passengers are dead before it crash to the ocean, watch Mentour Pilot documentary
@nealkelly97578 ай бұрын
@@rickjames5998It is true, stop being like Netflix
@Otherrandomguy428 ай бұрын
Sisk minds do sick things.
@FamWay2 ай бұрын
No matter how many times I see this case in different videos, hearing "Goodnight, Malaysian 370" always gives me the chills! ☠
@mooning62665 күн бұрын
me too that haunts me. He did it.....
@AngelTheredStar2910 ай бұрын
March 8, 2024 Here we are exactly 10 years later
@T.E.S.S.9 ай бұрын
wow that's like so deep man
@HeavenlyMandate9 ай бұрын
My dad was hospitalized in Jakarta 10 years ago, I was still 10 and woke up at 7AM as I had to visit my dad that morning. I watched the news that a Malaysian Airline flight was declared missing. 10 years later I find out that the plane was probably still flying when I watched the news. I'll never forget that day
@drippiibeats51209 ай бұрын
So is the 777 @@T.E.S.S.
@BlakeFerret9 ай бұрын
10 years later and these poor families still have no answers for what happened to their loved ones. I can't even imagine....
@jaketoffen24549 ай бұрын
I flew from kuala lampur to Incheon Korea (almost the exact same flight path) on that exact day 10 years later. It felt quite eerie.
@jamesburdett264410 ай бұрын
As a professional airline pilot for over 30 years, I agree with your scenario. The real clues lie in the details of the Captains personal life
@EMEL-hr4ut9 ай бұрын
They found nothing it is said in comments.
@kevlarcardhouse2529 ай бұрын
@@EMEL-hr4ut Not true. He and his wife were in the middle of a separation and he was connected to a Malaysian politician who was recently disgraced (or part of a smear campaign by the ruling party, depending on the source.)
@mountainrock76829 ай бұрын
@@EMEL-hr4utThat video of him simulating a plane crash is enough.
@EMEL-hr4ut9 ай бұрын
@kevinc.1729 those same matters taken by you as 'fact' could be motive to act for money and he didn't kill himself and the alleged trajectory in this video is wrong. This video conspicuously does not mention who or what was on board or deal with the striking coincidence of events with the Ukraine Malaysian Air crash
@EMEL-hr4ut9 ай бұрын
@mountainrock7682 who found this 'evidence' and analysed it ? You presume he left such evidence behind although the whole basis of this video was thst his motive was to dissappear without trace.
@mrnelsonius5631 Жыл бұрын
As someone who traveled deep into the Indian Ocean on a military flight, the idea of a “ghost plane” with no living humans onboard gliding ever deeper into that immense body of water is one of the eeriest images I’ve ever held in my mind.
@curtisjeffries-ki2do Жыл бұрын
Stop traveling deep into the Indian Ocean, homie.
@yasminbarry7941 Жыл бұрын
I guess military aircraft go out there all the time. But for 777 to do it....
@SocalSamStokes Жыл бұрын
Diego Garcia.
@jadebijou9508 Жыл бұрын
@@curtisjeffries-ki2dolol 😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂
@jadebijou9508 Жыл бұрын
@@yasminbarry7941gooooooood point . Very interesting
@carnivorouspanda4 ай бұрын
Probably one of the best long form videos i've seen on youtube. Awesome work, thank you!
@samadiddle11 ай бұрын
As a commercial airline pilot, I found this video incredibly well done and exceptionally realistic. Further, while very disappointing is the supposition that the captain would do this, it does seem at this point, the most plausible theory I've heard; this is the modern day equivelant of an Amelia Earhart mystery. Thank you for your efforts making this. May peace be on the families and loved ones of those lost in MH370.
@dlynn418811 ай бұрын
What about the policy. There have to be 2 staff members in the cockpit at all times. When in flight ???
@samadiddle11 ай бұрын
@@dlynn4188great question. Many airlines have that policy. Did MH have that policy at that time? I don’t know. Some airlines do not. German wings didn’t have it when the FO locked the CA out of the flight deck and crashed the plane into the mountains in continental Europe. That would require further investigation.
@jwst811 ай бұрын
@@samadiddle i'm pretty sure that a female flight attendant wouldn't be a problem to handle for an average male, he could've just KOd her.. btw, m370 disappeared in 2014, germanwings incident happened in 2015.. i always thought that the policy was introduced in 2015 for the first time ever.. hmm
@manojhegde323511 ай бұрын
A@@jwst8 Without doubt its a fantastic documentary. But without the FDR how has the maker managed to get a lot of the data out with respect to what pilot did in the cockpit??
@user1029xspl8dy11 ай бұрын
I get that you wouldn't want the assume the worst of a fellow pilot, but they did literally find his premeditated mass murder route on his flight simulator in his home...
@MNAvion Жыл бұрын
This was, without question, the best MH370 doc I’ve ever seen. You knocked it out of the park.
@GreenDotAviation Жыл бұрын
Thank you!
@Gabrocol Жыл бұрын
This and LEMMINO
@kittyairways1620 Жыл бұрын
@Repent-and-believe-in-Jesus Bro whattttt
@edonshatri6446 Жыл бұрын
@@Gabrocoltbh lemminos vid seems void of information compared to this.
@sharky56493 Жыл бұрын
Apologies to those who were fascinated with this video. This is one of the most baseless doc on MH370 ever produced. Blurring the boundary between facts and fiction. How in the world, this guy knows the specific details of what the Captain told his first captain when the plane's black box has never been found. Sweater and coffee, making holes in the plane, utter nonsense!!
@zuziakomentuje84049 ай бұрын
That's absolutly crazy. The way that the plane was still flying with everyone dead aboard just gives me chills.
@jeffhudson91309 ай бұрын
We don't know that this actually happened. This is strictly a hypothesis at this point.
@westnblu9 ай бұрын
its not unprecedented. It happened with the Helios flight. Everyone was unconscious except for a flight steward who donned an oxygen cylinder,
@jeffhudson91309 ай бұрын
@westnblu Oh absolutely! And I'm not saying that it's not. This could be absolutely what happened! But if you read through the comments, there are a lot of people assuming this is exactly what happened and it's already been proven. There is still the possibility that this is not what happened at all. I guess what I'm saying is, you. We probably should always remain open-minded, if a theory hasn't been proven true without a shadow of a doubt. I agree this is by far though, the only explanation that makes sense.
@LAHKACAUAWK9 ай бұрын
@@jeffhudson9130 cant wait for other explanatory theory that makes sense
@jeffhudson91309 ай бұрын
@@LAHKACAUAWK I'm hoping for concrete proof and then the official story lol
@thingsthattessdoes12 күн бұрын
Great coverage
@MoniMonsters11 күн бұрын
👏👏👏
@alexs5394 Жыл бұрын
This blows the netflix documentary completely out of the water. I listened to an interview with the director of that special, and she basically said she eliminated the captain as a suspect because of people she talked to who knew him. Apparently he was a nice guy. And that's it. Just like that, she had a conclusion that she worked backwards from to support. Completely opposite from how the scientific method is supposed to work. As a scientist myself, it was so frustrating.
@crazyhorse2542 Жыл бұрын
Empathy has clouded her judgement
@turkeeg7644 Жыл бұрын
Gacy was considered a nice guy. Nobody knows anybody...... evidence.
@marks6663 Жыл бұрын
these days, that is how all science works. They start with the conclusion they want, and then look for whatever evidence would support that and ignore any that undermines it. And if they can't find any, they create it.
@StupidusMaximusTheFirst Жыл бұрын
I haven't seen the Netflix documentary, but I believe this. Netflix and most TV is directed towards the general public, on youtube you find more detailed and more technical documentaries, they're directed for maybe a more technical crowd. I used to watch the "Mayday" TV series, and almost all crash documentaries I've seen on youtube far surpass the TV series in regards to technical details, what went wrong, etc. Even if maybe they are a bit on the too low side of budget, they're still good, while "Mayday" had dramatic reenactments, you could see the passengers panicking, stepping on one another or punching the kid next to them or their wives, to steal their oxygen mask etc. It was interesting, although I prefer the low budget youtube MSFS reenactments - less drama.
@trevorphilips9933 Жыл бұрын
I’m not disagreeing with you but if the captain did hijack the aircraft (which I think he did), what was his motive then? Why would someone with a distinguished flying career throw it all away? But that netflix documentary was a bunch of bs. The only good thing that came from it was it had interviews of the victims’ families and shared their stories/perspectives.
@danieltanner580410 ай бұрын
The amount of fail safes, redundancies and standard protocols that had to be manually overridden makes it irrefutable. The captain is a murderer.
@Nameisnotimportant10 ай бұрын
People are scared of flying all the time and while we don’t really know the exact cause of this accident it still highlights how many backup systems there are on board to ensure everyone’s safety even when something goes terribly wrong. After all the aviation transportation is the safest way of transportation out there and it is constantly improving and improving leading to even less and less accidents. While I am not a real pilot I am a pilot who flies in a flight simulator at home using highly realistic and accurate aircraft models and even I can tell you that the redundancy of aircraft systems is just insane.
@pablorubio828710 ай бұрын
@@Nameisnotimportant True. I have X-Plane 12 and just disabling basic things is almost impossible
@Nameisnotimportant10 ай бұрын
@@pablorubio8287 I fly in X-Plane 11 and I actually can confirm this. Unless you literally intentionally make a wing disappear by going to a failures menu it’s actually possible to safely land even with very screwed up airplane often times without even a lot of issues but that’s of course only if you know that airplane well and you have a proper knowledge and experience flying it.
@pablorubio828710 ай бұрын
@@Nameisnotimportant Hard to accidentally crash a plane. Shame some people don't realise it, right?
@Nameisnotimportant10 ай бұрын
@@pablorubio8287 Yeah I mean…so many people are just scared of air travel especially when they hear about all of these accidents. And some of them are scared to an extent where if you were to pull out the numbers of how many people died around the world as a result of car crashes vs plane crashes in 2023 those people would still doubt the safety of air travel. Pilots nowadays are really well trained to deal with challenging emergency situations which most non aviation enthusiast people often can’t even imagine happening and as we both mentioned earlier the planes themselves are designed in such a way that they just simply don’t fall out of the sky that easily. And usually when an accident happens it’s not caused by like one single fault or one single human error. Usually it’s caused by many more things (for example multiple pilot errors combined with whole bunch of different factors that further worsen the situation). Whenever I travel as a passenger on board of a real aircraft I always fully trust all of the cabin crew members including pilots as I know that nowadays they have to be very well trained to be able to meet the necessary requirements. I understand that in 1970s or 1980s the safety standards were nowhere near where they were in 1990s and absolutely nowhere near to being even close to what they’re now. But we are in 2024 and not only the air travel is statistically the safest it’s ever been but it keeps constantly improving even further.
@davidcc58088 ай бұрын
This documentary deserves every ad I had to watch
@Fee2128 ай бұрын
I pay KZbin £10 pm, so I never see useless annoying adverts. 😅
@sharit79707 ай бұрын
@@Fee212 Same. Worth it to me.
@andrewronaldsmith7 ай бұрын
So much wild speculation in this video I fund it hard to give any credibility vs other channels that reported known facts
@clubbizarre7 ай бұрын
KZbin premium is the best money I ever spent in my life.
@MusicissuperiorEVHROX3166 ай бұрын
@@andrewronaldsmith Personally I think the video’s very well researched and informative. I think the signs do point to the captain being at fault, but I could be wrong, and now these two brothers are trying to find the wreckage in Cambodia. What channels did you watch on the subject?
@Valentineatelier7 ай бұрын
Not even finished w the video yet but the fact that airlines put so many precautions in place for the exact reason of keeping planes from disaster and this man accounted and planned for all of it to do just that. Reminds me that even “checking just to be safe” isn’t enough
@ashleyisonabudget6 ай бұрын
I was on a recent flight on JetBlue, and the captain left the cockpit to use the bathroom and a flight attendant went into the cockpit and stayed until both pilots were in together. I’m sure this is added protocol since this event or event like this but I’m surprised it wasn’t something thought of before. We place too much trust in humans
@joecurran28116 ай бұрын
@@ashleyisonabudgetA flight attendant counldn't stop a pilot doing this if they wanted
@ashleyisonabudget6 ай бұрын
@@joecurran2811 It’s not about if the flight attendant can stop the pilot or not. It’s about ensuring the pilot cannot lock himself in the cock pit alone. It’s to ensure that the pilot who leaves has a way to get back in. Unless the pilot decides to incapacitate the flight attendant but it seems like physical force is usually not their M.O
@Katt306 ай бұрын
@@ashleyisonabudget Well, this event and probably the germanwings accident basically a year later. Where the first officer locked the pilot out of the cockpit and crashed the plane into a mountain.
@frostyvr98055 ай бұрын
@@ashleyisonabudgetthat’s actually from I believe an air Germany flight where the first officer locked the captain out and crashed the plane
@SakTenny10 ай бұрын
Some viewers are confused about which information presented in this scenario is speculation, and which is factual. KZbin tells me that the video description is too long, so I cannot add this clarification there. I will do so in this comment instead. Here is a list below: Speculation: - That the captain asked the FO to leave the cockpit - The behaviour of the FO - that he used a portable O2 bottle, used his phone, tried to gain entry into the cockpit. - That the plane was depressurised - That the external lights were turned off - That the SDU log-on at 02:25 MYT was a result of the captain powering up the L and R main electrical buses, and that this was done in order to stop the equipment bay from overheating. - That the captain was dead as the plane flew south over the Southern Indian Ocean - That the plane was not glided onto the surface of the ocean, but entered an uncontrolled spiral dive, leading to a high-speed impact with the water. Facts (see video description for sources): - For two data points (over a split second), the transponder of MH370 sent position information, but no altitude information. This indicates that somebody in the cockpit rotated the switch through the 'Alt off' position. - MH370 disappeared from secondary radar - Almost immediately after disappearing from secondary radar, the plane turned left, to head south west over the Malaysian peninsula (as seen on Primary radar) - The First Officer's cell phone connected with a cell tower on Penang at 01:52am MYT. It is still not known whether any passengers' phones connected to the cell tower, or even, whether this was investigated. - The plane made a turn at Penang, to head up the Strait of Malacca - The SDU powered back on at 02:25 MYT while the plane was flying up the strait of Malacca - The plane turned south over the Indian Ocean some time after 02:30 MYT - The Captain had simulated a flight into the Southern Indian Ocean on his home flight simulator on February 3rd that year, ending in fuel exhaustion. - The captain deleted his home flight simulator from his PC on Feb 20th, the day before he operated MH370 to Beijing. - The crew O2 tanks on 9M-MRO had been topped up to 1800psi in the hours before the flight. - INMARSAT engineers used the BTO data from the plane's SDU to determine the plane's distance to the satellite, creating 7 rings. They also used the BFO data to determine the plane's vertical speed in what were likely the flight's final moments. I will add to this list as more questions come. P/S: above is a comment of the owner of this video replying to a person. I only copied it like a reminder for myself.
@JorgeTorrespluspage10 ай бұрын
Thank you very much. So no information on other iPhones trying to connect to the cellular tower just like the FO's?
@lewishendo932810 ай бұрын
Hey, I remember the captains home flight data wasn’t actually clear and that the flight towards the indian ocean was recovered from corrupted files and it was unclear whether all the data points towards the indian ocean were in the same save file or not. This was a while ago that I remember this so I’m not sure if the findings changed and it’s confirmed now but I remember the investigation board not being able to 100% confirm there was a similar flight path. Is there any clarification on this? Thanks for your post btw very detailed and great!
@haj585610 ай бұрын
@@lewishendo9328 yeah i need a source for this too. No reputable outlets are reporting this with confidence, it's all theories.
@janebrown723110 ай бұрын
I was able to deduce correctly which bits were speculation, but I find it really helpful to have it listed in such detail, particularly for reference later. The list of facts is particularly compelling. Many thanks for your effort!
@cactu10 ай бұрын
"That the plane was not glided onto the surface of the ocean, but entered an uncontrolled spiral dive, leading to a high-speed impact with the water. " But the data said it was descending at 15k ft per minute.
@aakarshanrastogi9 ай бұрын
Here from Mentour Pilots video on MH370! Happy that so many viewers recommended this video!❤
@ddegn9 ай бұрын
Same here.
@minetruly9 ай бұрын
Same. It's the opposite side of Mentor Pilot's analysis. He gave the pure facts so it's clear what the evidence actually confirms. While this channel gives a story that's impossible to confirm, but helps us wrap our heads around a story that makes sense and offers closure.
@Valpo20049 ай бұрын
The biggest difference that I saw was Mentour Pilot said there was some evidence (don't remember how strong it was) that the plane may have done some piloted figure 8's before crashing. That would indicate that who ever was flying the aircraft probably was alive all the way up til impact with the ocean.
@journeyforyou56009 ай бұрын
i wish green dot aviation and mentour pilot had equal subscribers(green dot aviation only has over 300 K subs compared to mentour who was 2M🙄🙄
@ir0q9 ай бұрын
It was the WSPR track@@Valpo2004
@tian90113 күн бұрын
Im here again Malaysia agreed to continue the search after 10 years
@oby-16077 ай бұрын
This is a very real reason that so much control should NOT be given to one man.
@sinickasdavis21595 ай бұрын
Amen Amen Amen Amen
@effie91405 ай бұрын
You’re so right. It sounds crazy. There should be at least 3 people.
@tommustoe23045 ай бұрын
Ye and unfortunately it took another air disaster (germanwings 9525), where the co pilot locked the captain out of the cockpit while he used the toilet before intentionally crashing the plane into a mountain, for authorities to realise this and make changes
@TheColinChapman4 ай бұрын
@@tommustoe2304 perfect way to put it. I recall that back in 2014, many pilots interviewed on TV intensively defended the accident theory, even after it had become public that the plane had kept on flying for seven hours. After the germanwings crash one year later, all these voices went silent.
@angamaitesangahyando6854 ай бұрын
@@TheColinChapmanThe captain had no legal right to suicide, so that's why he was forced to do this. - Adûnâi
@8777RL9 ай бұрын
I cannot imagine the desperation of the 1st officer...must be devastating!
@RMProjects7859 ай бұрын
This is absolutely horrifying. He did everything that he could've, rest in peace
@Skabanis9 ай бұрын
Ahhh this is speculation
@Eagle_SFM9 ай бұрын
@Skabanis it is speculation, but what isn't speculation is that something horrifying did happen to him
@bebekdragon76049 ай бұрын
bruh why are people so easy to believe this made up scenario, for all we know he couldve been the hijacker.
@ReichLife9 ай бұрын
@@bebekdragon7604 Cause with your logic it might as well be green people from Mars. Fact remains this scenario is by FAR most plausible. In contrast to any unlikely hijacker captain was in actual position to do so without much effort. DUH, Flight 9525 which happened few years later showcases how easily such thing could happen with unhinged pilot. Hijacker theory completely ignores how tougher getting into cockpit is in post 9/11 world. It also utterly ignores perfect timing when plane went AWOL. How the hell hijacker would know to take control at this specific moment? Hijacker theory plain and simply doesn't work for way too many factors.
@ack_ Жыл бұрын
I have no words to describe how incredible, complete, succinct, well produced and eerie this is. I've watched every video about the topic (and every video of yours), and read through the "final report", and I study engineering, so I thought I knew almost every hard fact and reasonable logical inference. Also, I was initially skeptical about this video, because I feared it may dive into weird conspiracies or baseless theroies. Also, since no definitive final report exists, one could say "this is just speculation". But the way you presented the topic, the clear assumptions you made, keeping very clear the "factual story" vs the "scenario" you explored, the animations, the integration between ATC, cockpit, instruments, cabin, aircraft systems, maps, timelines, outside shots, and very well blended airport footage. This should not be on KZbin, this should be in freaking Cinemas. I didn't know the Capitan deleted the simulator from his computer's drive, I feel like this fact isn't widely known, or given the importance it deserves. Same with the oxygen tanks, and with radio waves being shifted out due to the plane vertical speed. Also, I didn't picture the final moments, and the idea of a plane cruising by itself with the Capitan unconscious, it's really eerie. A sophisticated piece of metal flying by itself, exhausting fuel, on a trajectory ending in the middle of one of the most isolated and alienated areas in the planet, disintegrating on impact and pieces spreading over half of the surface of the ocean. Thank you for this incredible narration, the clear assumptions, the precise walk through and not focusing on the reasons the pilot did this; that's your masterpiece. Hope we'll get something close to this level for AF447 :D We all owe you a drink
@GreenDotAviation Жыл бұрын
Thanks so much for the detailed comment and feedback. I'm delighted that you got what I was aiming at in this video. The facts that you mentioned - the O2 tanks being filled up, the flight sim being deleted, and the radio waves showing a descent in the final minutes - all of this is evidence which has been well known to those who are familiar with the case for years, but not to the general public. I thought this was a shame, as it has lead to the proliferation of bizarre conspiracy theories (like the alien stuff which is currently having a moment online). If this video can go some way towards showing a broader range of the known facts to people, then it will have achieved its aim. As for AF447, that video will come in time! And it will be another big project. Edit: Some viewers are confused about which information presented in this scenario is speculation, and which is factual. KZbin tells me that the video description is too long, so I cannot add this clarification there. I will do so in this comment instead. Here is a list below: Speculation: - That the captain asked the FO to leave the cockpit - The behaviour of the FO - that he used a portable O2 bottle, used his phone, tried to gain entry into the cockpit. - That the plane was depressurised - That the external lights were turned off - That the SDU log-on at 02:25 MYT was a result of the captain powering up the L and R main electrical buses, and that this was done in order to stop the equipment bay from overheating. - That the captain was dead as the plane flew south over the Southern Indian Ocean - That the plane was not glided onto the surface of the ocean, but entered an uncontrolled spiral dive, leading to a high-speed impact with the water. Facts (see video description for sources): - For two data points (over a split second), the transponder of MH370 sent position information, but no altitude information. This indicates that somebody in the cockpit rotated the switch through the 'Alt off' position. - MH370 disappeared from secondary radar - Almost immediately after disappearing from secondary radar, the plane turned left, to head south west over the Malaysian peninsula (as seen on Primary radar) - The First Officer's cell phone connected with a cell tower on Penang at 01:52am MYT. It is still not known whether any passengers' phones connected to the cell tower, or even, whether this was investigated. - The plane made a turn at Penang, to head up the Strait of Malacca - The SDU powered back on at 02:25 MYT while the plane was flying up the strait of Malacca - The plane turned south over the Indian Ocean some time after 02:30 MYT - The Captain had simulated a flight into the Southern Indian Ocean on his home flight simulator on February 3rd that year, ending in fuel exhaustion. - The captain deleted his home flight simulator from his PC on Feb 20th, the day before he operated MH370 to Beijing. - The crew O2 tanks on 9M-MRO had been topped up to 1800psi in the hours before the flight. - INMARSAT engineers used the BTO data from the plane's SDU to determine the plane's distance to the satellite, creating 7 rings. They also used the BFO data to determine the plane's vertical speed in what were likely the flight's final moments. I will add to this list as more questions come.
@peterfamous8794 Жыл бұрын
This is infinitely superior than the Netflix documentary.
@swiftrealm Жыл бұрын
Mentour Pilot covered AF477 - the Titanic of the skies. You should check that out.
@patolt1628 Жыл бұрын
The main difference with AF447 is that the airplane and the flight recorders have been found and that there is a final report and no mystery. It has been very well covered by Mentour pilot indeed, based on the final report and his experience as an airline captain.
@smasher. Жыл бұрын
@@GreenDotAviationit definitely achieved its aim , well done.
@houmm082 ай бұрын
This is better, far better in every way than any TV documentary on this chilling matter. The production and narration are superlative
@narozniakc Жыл бұрын
One of my rugbymate was on the plane with his gf, his sister and his mother. I remember to this day following every step of the way the story and all the confusion around it. It was heartbreaking.
@DanielleFoster. Жыл бұрын
How tragic. That really sucks. I'm so sorry for you and every single soul affected by this.
@CaptainJeanLucPicard Жыл бұрын
Sorry to hear.
@RT-qd8yl Жыл бұрын
@@weaverdreams You're apparently privy to some new conclusive information that none of the rest of us has seen, as you can unequivocally state exactly what happened even without being on the plane! What's the scoop?
@antihypocrisy8978 Жыл бұрын
Another victim to Muslim violence. God bless America and Israel.
@TM2U-1 Жыл бұрын
I’m sorry for your loss.
@lec47 Жыл бұрын
I have watched this 3 times now and I just can't get over how good it is. My heart goes out to the First Officer. He was likely the only one on board who had the horror of knowing he was going to die and there was nothing he could do about it. I cannot imagine the panic and terror. May his soul, and all the others, rest in peace.
@dwaynemcallister7231 Жыл бұрын
Yes, so true and I wonder if the captain ever had a moment of regret after there was no going back?
@ImperialDiecast Жыл бұрын
interesting fact, the germanwings crash where the pilot got locked out happened just 1 year earlier. maybe zaharia got his inspiration from there.
@Ashghaus Жыл бұрын
you have no idea, i was in a free fall 2 years ago and its changed my life... being so close to death the way i experianced ripped everyhting i thought life was about out and chnaged me forever... we free fell for 10 mins... those 10 mins will last me my lifetime.... it was like a rollercoaster feeling but 50 million times stronger along with ever negative emotion you could imagine .... nerves on fire, crying and choking on your own tears... suddenly the stranger next to you becomes your family
@tjotwo Жыл бұрын
There may have been one or two things the 1st Officer could have done in this scenario. There were multiple portable oxygen systems in the passenger compartment, so he may have been able to get them set up and play possum (give the impression he had died) and look for an opportunity. Anther thing he could have done was open 1 ore more emergency exit doors. That would not have changed his outcome, but it would have put a big monkey-wrench in the captain's plans and caused the plane to end up in an easier place to locate.
@puakagrinder2766 Жыл бұрын
It is just a theory...nobody knows what actually has happened
@nicolel304111 ай бұрын
I still remember the day when we learnt, that while we had already starting mourning the loss, the plane was actually still flying. An Australian wife and mother in Perth lost her husband / kids father, on that flight. She went out and looked towards the ocean and sky and screamed out in pain when she heard the news the plane was missing on it way to china.. unknowingly at the time, she was actually the closest to him at that point and the plane was still flying in the distance, in the direction she was looking out to sea.... off the western coast of aus... i dont know how i would cope learning that after fact ontop of the grief already
@arulraj307611 ай бұрын
Sad but true, the deeds of a Malaysian pilot. All given to them easy with a birthright of being a Malay.
@liloleist513310 ай бұрын
What is the "birthright of being a Malay"?
@1ceb3rg__9 ай бұрын
@@liloleist5133Malaysia is a country that is extremely multiracial with chinese, indian, indigenous tribes and way more diversity. But since there are so many foreign ethnic groups not native to Malaysia, the malays who are actually native to Malaysia and have their ethnicity in the country name are highly important in Malaysia. Most politicians and all prime ministers in Malaysia have all been Malay's.
@tamantanniru5149 ай бұрын
sounds like a horror story
@zamar21583 ай бұрын
@@1ceb3rg__ bhumiputra - meaning son of the soil ( oddly enough, in sanskrit not malay)
@drewizkoollikeicecreАй бұрын
I’ve seen several shows and experts try to solve it. They almost always point to the pilot. There’s no other explanation.
@Morlen115 күн бұрын
Right, it’s like they want to say it but can’t unless they have proof. The flight simulator would’ve been red flags
@MoonMoon-fx1op Жыл бұрын
Can you imagine being one of the family members or friend that was waiting for this flight to land? Only to be met with an empty casket and lies from the government. My heart hurts for the families and friends til this day.
@mishtic8024 Жыл бұрын
Yes its a horrific and bizarre feel.. Everybody deserve a closure and the cold hearted pilot didn't even spare a thought for this... till date i do not understand what did he achieved by this fanatic act... apart from bringing disgrace to his family and friends.
@akane8615 Жыл бұрын
@@mishtic8024 This thing is pure fiction and never happened, it's speculation ffs. If anything it's closer to the german flight crash where the copilot did proven to commit it.
@LeviAndFriends111 Жыл бұрын
You don’t know anything. Seriously you don’t. Especially if it was a Govt cover up. It could have been Kurt Cobains killer, you don’t know.
@waxl4449 Жыл бұрын
It's not an empty casket but contain deceased passenger soul in it
@MoonMoon-fx1op Жыл бұрын
@@waxl4449 I said empty casket cause they were never able to recover the bodies
@aaronszopko Жыл бұрын
The best documentary about the Malaysian Flight 370 we've ever seen! I'm very interested in the topic of the tragedy, I've seen many videos about it, and yet I've learned a lot new things from this video. You did a very great job, keep it up!
@GreenDotAviation Жыл бұрын
Thanks so much! Glad you found new info in this video
@TWCobra Жыл бұрын
Former airline pilot here. V.Good technical video. There are a couple of things I'd dispute though. The Langkawi PSR only has a range of 60 NM. It is a Terminal Radar so it doesn't need the range of an Air Defence radar. It was the Butterworth Air Defence PSR that picked them up in the Malacca Strait. Without doubt it was the captain. The captain probably did the TOPC toilet run first and as soon as he came back told the FO he should go. I've done enough of these two-pilot, back of the clock, all night sectors to know how they work. There is no requirement to turn off power to the ACARS to stop it transmitting. The is an MFD on the centre pedestal that holds the ACARS manager program. That program can be used to Isolate the ACARS from the communications system. It literally takes less than 5 seconds to do it. The LH AC Bus powers the SATCOM SDU so it is only that bus that needs to be turned off to shut down the SATCOM. The SATCOM provision in the cabin for the Cabin Supervisor was the main target there. The RH Bus operates normally but he would have closed the RH Bus Tie to stop that powering the LH Bus. I don't know if that would make a difference to the equipment cooling, I think it may but not to the same extent as losing both AC Busses for an extended time. As far as the Cabin oxygen bottles are concerned, if the Cabin Altitude was taken to 35,000 feet, it doesn't matter how much oxygen is in those bottles, there isn't enough positive pressure to force the oxygen into the alveoli, which means anyone in the Cabin using them was probably unconscious within a few minutes. The 22 Minute overhead oxygen generators work to a schedule that assumes the aircraft is descending after a depress. This means that after three minutes, the generators reduce their output on the assumption of a descent. This probably means that everyone in the Cabin was Non-Compos after about 5 minutes, brain dead not long after. But well done on the video. Hope to see more.
@ryanseddon4800 Жыл бұрын
You clearly should have been the consultant on the netflix show.
@EmmaKnightleyNo1 Жыл бұрын
Thank you for your added expert insight!
@seanbittner7136 Жыл бұрын
Wow airline pilots are also nearly electricians/electronics/software and system engineers and techs. I can see why. My respect to you all. I'm not worthy.
@warmachine9553 Жыл бұрын
Excellent expert insight.
@KuostA Жыл бұрын
facts, they're experts in SOOOOo many realms. it's unreal.@@seanbittner7136
@VPopkins3 ай бұрын
I could not make it even through half of the Netflix version. Watched this one non-stop. Interesting, with lots of due diligence behind it. And excellent narration.
@pablorubio82878 ай бұрын
Here is the music used in the video: 0:01 - I can feel her - Tim Mann 1:11 - Retour - Tony Anderson 4:57 - Awe and Wonder - Tim Mann 6:49 - Dreamy feeling - Tim Mann 9:10 - Current Miner - Luke Antecio 14:04 - Halo - Tony Anderson 16:39 - I can feel her - Tim Mann 19:07 - We Are the Visitors - Curved Mirror 27:30 - Ghosting - Christoffer Moe Ditvlesen 30:40 - Migratory Birds - Curved Mirror 33:46 - Drifting Away - Tim Mann 41:55 - At the hotel - Dream Man 44:12 - Drifting Away - Tim Mann 46:44 - Retour - Tony Anderson 48:27 - Dreamy feeling - Tim Mann 50:35 - Ask where they come from - Experia 59:42 - Voiceless Whispering - Ethan Sloan 1:01:56 - Embolism - Ethan Sloan 1:08:12 - Eclosion - Tony Anderson
@LaTierraNueva198 ай бұрын
Thank you! Any idea what the track at around 55:00??
@pablorubio82878 ай бұрын
@@LaTierraNueva19 I'm sorry I couldn't find it but it's very likely it's either 'face of fear - gavin brivik' or 'reality of the goal - gavin brivik' however, there is no link on KZbin
@FeedRevo6 ай бұрын
@@pablorubio8287didn’t ask
@DirtyDog-ef8ms5 ай бұрын
@@pablorubio8287how the hell do you know all of these song and why
@pablorubio82875 ай бұрын
@@DirtyDog-ef8ms Green Dot sends them on discord
@_WhatsInAName_ Жыл бұрын
This is your magnum opus. All your videos have led to this. Well done. My heart goes out to the victims and their families. I’m just left wondering why
@tarnvedra9952 Жыл бұрын
His other videos were not 75% speculation.
@closedeyed Жыл бұрын
@@tarnvedra9952they never even found the wreckage of this plane and we have no idea what happened after the first deviation from the planned route, we really can’t do anything but speculate after that. I lived in Malaysia until the search operation was called off and the general assumption was that all things considered the captain deliberately crashed the plane - we just can never know for sure
@dominikdorn159 Жыл бұрын
@@closedeyed but this "theory" i wouldnt even call it theory, everthing he listed up in this video makes sense, and everything gives hints that the captain did it, a really big hint would be who gave the maintance guy the task to Fill the Cockpit oxygen bottle up on THE SAME DAY, why did nobody ask this guy this big question, there are so many questions left open .... edit: and He simulated this exact scenario in Flight Simulator, like how long he could glide from the point where he would ran out of fuel, i mean this is a dead giveaway that he is 100% responsible
@stephenholland5930 Жыл бұрын
@@dominikdorn159Checking the crew oxygen bottle pressure would be part of the Daily Check carried out on the aircraft. The engineer responsible wouldn't need to be told by anyone to fill up the bottles. It's part of the check he's signing for.
@zeejayy8911 Жыл бұрын
@@stephenholland5930 Correct but as the video mentioned, The oxygen is topped up only a few times a year, not everyday. And the day the oxygen bottle was topped up is the exact day this incident occurred
@superwout9 ай бұрын
Absolutely fascinating. Very well done. I feel especially sad for Fariq. Unlike all the rest on board, he experienced sheer terror because he realized what was really going on.
@poundcake997 ай бұрын
You do realize that we don't know enough to confirm whether this story about Fariq is correct, right?
@superwout7 ай бұрын
@@poundcake99 yes but it is the most plausible scenario, right...
@miykle74937 ай бұрын
@@poundcake99 do you know what actually happened? I don’t know all the facts and don’t know if this is correct, but if there’s any merit of truth/ plausibility to this story, it’s sad all the same, just as whatever the actual story (that we may never know) is depressing
@YGardenRose6 ай бұрын
Maybe…the pilot could have killed him quickly with the ax that’s near the pilots…no one knows if the captain sent the copilot out for coffee
@HalloweenHalloween-sc4jo4 ай бұрын
@@YGardenRosethat can’t be true because Fariq turned his phone on, which is something a pilot is never supposed to do aboard a plane.
@hazimfirdaus34388 күн бұрын
Although I am not a professional in the aviation field, if the disappearance of MH370 was intentionally executed by a pilot, it appears to be a highly well-planned act. Here's why: First, the interception point chosen was at the boundary between Malaysia and Vietnam (IGARI). This suggests that the individual responsible was not an ordinary person but someone with extensive knowledge of air routes within the ASEAN region. They managed to avoid detection in Vietnamese, Thai, and Indonesian airspace, indicating a clear understanding of what needed to be done and the precise path to take. If we consider the possibility of a terrorist forcing the pilot to alter the flight path, it would still be improbable for such an individual to execute such a detailed plan. The video evidence suggests that no passenger aboard possessed the necessary skills or experience to operate a modern aircraft, making it unlikely for a terrorist to pilot the plane themselves. In such a scenario, the pilot would likely have been coerced, but the intricate details of this flight path-such as turning towards Penang and then navigating through the Strait of Malacca while avoiding Indonesian airspace-are almost inconceivable for anyone without significant expertise. This level of precision strongly suggests that whoever executed this plan knew exactly what they were doing.
@HeavenlyMandate9 ай бұрын
My dad was hospitalized in Jakarta 10 years ago, I was still 10 and woke up at 7AM as I had to visit my dad that morning. I watched the news that a Malaysian Airline flight was declared missing. 10 years later I find out that the plane was probably still flying when I watched the news. I'll never forget that day Edit: A year after this video and I finally returned to say that Malaysia government has approved the continuation of the search for MH370
@TerfBashingMFer80219 ай бұрын
Crazy eh? We all first were alerted this plane was missing and they were searching, meanwhile she was still flying as a ghost plane south of the search!! Creepy
@syedazad-vz1wp9 ай бұрын
😮😮😮
@unholydanger3 ай бұрын
20 years later landed back at Malaysia airport, surrounded by police and military, for them to find out that it was empty...
@LoadedAlloy Жыл бұрын
I’ve watched a lot of documentaries on MH370 and most of them repeated info and never went in depth on specifics of airplane controls. Your video is exceptionally detailed and I found myself learning something new every minute!
@MKSouthernStar Жыл бұрын
Totally agree.
@moosesnWoop Жыл бұрын
because it's from a lecture that came out a month ago. It's on KZbin, Royal Aeronautical Society MH370. Very interesting, scientific work
@fallinginthed33p Жыл бұрын
The flight path around the northern coast of Sumatra should have been considered suspicious from the start. Instead of simply flying west from Penang Island if there was an emergency onboard, the curving flight path looked intentional, as if the pilot flying wanted to avoid ATC and military radar.
@edytekken Жыл бұрын
yeah i thought this was another video with vague info and speculation just like the ones i've watched past few years. this is different, but how did this guy tells the story like he was sitting next to the pilot? like whats up with the sweater and coffee? did i miss something? is there any new records leaked to the public?
@mballer Жыл бұрын
@@edytekken Total speculation.
@Sunburst7511 ай бұрын
I would like to point out, nobody switched the SDU off and nobody switched it back on, because there is no means to do so. Bizarrely though, it cannot be disabled without human intervention. Air experts spent a huge amount of time trying to find a way it could have gone off and on by itself - they drew a blank. Hence, the only human intervention that could turn it on and off as there is no switch or means to do it, would be a power interruption instigated by human interaction. Whoever was flying it turned the power off shortly after IGARI then turned it on again after 2.22am. He didn't know about the SDU, many pilots were asked about the SDU after MH370 disappeared, none knew what it was. They didn't need to because there was no means of turning it on or off, it was not part of a pilot's training. Whoever did this thought his route would be 100% untraceable forever, but the SDU caught him out.
@bricedesmaures621611 ай бұрын
Power interruption and power restoration can make SDU go off and on.
@Sunburst7511 ай бұрын
That's what I'm saying. It can't be turned on or off from the cockpit or anywhere else and it can't go off by itself.@@bricedesmaures6216
@Sunburst7511 ай бұрын
@@bricedesmaures6216 Yes thats what I said, but power interruptions are incredibly rare.
@EGarrett0111 ай бұрын
@@Sunburst75 This whole situation is a massive outlier so it's fine to assume that rare things happened.
@Sunburst7511 ай бұрын
@@EGarrett01 The power went off after the turn at Igari, and it almost certainly went off in the radar dead zone. It comes back on again about 40 minutes later, which just happened to be outside Indonesian radar range. It then stays on until the end as there was no need to cut the power again as there was only 1 person left alive on board. The question is, who did it?
@gemstrikes3 ай бұрын
This case haunts me. As once said "Planes go up, planes go down. What planes don't do, is vanish off the face of the Earth." This is one of the best videos I've seen on MH370 and I agree with almost all of this. Another company is resuming the search in November of 2024 (which isn't very far off when I comment this since it is October of 2024), so maybe we will finally get the answer to MH370's final resting place. Keep up the good work, man.
@eragonbromsson112210 ай бұрын
When compared to Helios flight 552 it becomes clear as day that nothing about MH370's downing was accidental & the only thing that was left to fate was its final glide.
@lollycopter9 ай бұрын
Germanwings Flight 9525 which happened nearly exactly a year later proves without a doubt that such human actions are possible. Also, what happens in the United States to schools and other crowded places also shows what depraved acts humans are capable of. The fact that so many pilots want to deny this is quite telling. Unfortunately, denial doesn't change the facts.
@OliviaRehrig4 ай бұрын
@@lollycopter Bingo!
@DSK12345y18 күн бұрын
Avoiding military radar and knowing EXACTLY when and where to fly the aircraft to avoid being detected would have taken an extremely experienced pilot just like the captain!
@digitaldyslexia75896 ай бұрын
There was recently some INCREDIBLE new evidence confirming the mostly agreed upon path shown in this video and the science and engineering behind how this evidence was found is beyond astounding. Over a decade after the crash, engineers were able to use the WSPR (weak signal propagation reporter) system which records basically ALL signals that had transmitted between planes, phones, satellites.. basically everything that created a signal that would propagate around the atmosphere. They were able to identify anomalies in various signals transmitting across the Indian Ocean and use them to track aircraft. With all that stored data, they were able to corroborate the flightpath. Mentour Pilot made an excellent video on it.
@pareshkamaliya24935 ай бұрын
Thank you for the information and for mentioning Mentour Pilot. I hope this mystery will be resolved and families will get closure for their loved ones.
@NoMoreBsPlease4 ай бұрын
If you're going to post information, at least make it accurate! Nearly EVERYTHING you wrote is incorrect. WSPRnet does NOT track signals transmitted between planes, not one! I don't know where you got that from? WSPRnet has specific transmitters, recievers and open source protocols. There's specific data stored on a database and it's that transmitted and received data that is cross referenced. The only plane flying in that area during that time was MH370. That made for much easier and cleaner data to cross reference. Next time at least read the wiki before trying to paraphrase a technical video.
@digitaldyslexia75894 ай бұрын
@@NoMoreBsPlease I'm talking as a layman, because I know people will go to the video and learn exacts for themselves. Thanks for clearing that up though
@ruthnoronha82064 ай бұрын
Yah but Peter didn’t talk about the 7 arcs or the pilot may have been responsible. Because that’s an assumption. A good assumption because which hijacker’s woukd make no demands or brag or why just abort the plane in middle of the Indian Ocean. But how did they know the first officer went to get a coffee?? That’s an assumption.
@digitaldyslexia75894 ай бұрын
@@ruthnoronha8206 He did talk about them a long time ago in a previous video on it, the more recent one was just to cover the new evidence from WSPR
@Persephone_Rodi9 ай бұрын
There are pilots who fight bravely till the end to save the souls on board, and then there is this psychopath, who puts cowards to shame.
@professorgrimm46026 ай бұрын
We don't know if it was the pilot. This is all specualtion. The pilot, just like everyone else, is innocent until proven guilty. I find it really distasteful to accuse a dead person of mass murder without watertight evidence. All we have is that "it makes sense", but there is no definitive proof and also, there is an absolute lack of motive.
@nijooo54806 ай бұрын
@@professorgrimm4602All the evidence we have point to this, this is the only theory with no inconsistencies. There were so many procedures and standards which had to be broken to pull this off. Not to mention, the pilot literally practiced this route on his simulator at home, a month before this happened.
@juliemanarin41275 ай бұрын
Truth
@solo-repair93745 ай бұрын
Absolute rubbish ! That pilot had to overide all those switches to be avasive and achieved it! Wake up man
@Insertregret5 ай бұрын
@@professorgrimm4602lack of motive is such a stupid argument. Plan hijackers in general as far as motive goes has no relation to the people on board
@chromedreams818410 күн бұрын
this is without a doubt the most well produced youtube video/documentary I have ever seen. i put this video on to sleep all the time
@theelephantintheroom69 Жыл бұрын
It's so eerie knowing the plane was still flying when everyone believe it had crashed
@simbatortie9684 Жыл бұрын
Airline need to have 3 pilots. If one go make coffee the other officer can still stay behind and check on the Captain. LOL!!!
@JadeeCee-ty1he Жыл бұрын
How did this channel know that Zaharie after sending his co pilot to get coffee, reached behind him to get his sweater…?
@teddykinyua5475 Жыл бұрын
@@JadeeCee-ty1heIt was a hypothesis that he said
@GlutenEruption Жыл бұрын
@@simbatortie9684 this was only implemented after this accident
@LeolaGlamour Жыл бұрын
@@GlutenEruption Not true before flying became more streamlined there used to be more people in cockpit like 3-4. They were flight eginners, not pilots but they could still help in emergencies.
@CastleMc8 ай бұрын
It is obvious that only intentional and pre-planned acts of the pilot can explain the flightpath and disappearance of the plane. Netflix simply juiced up alternative theories and (mostly) fringe voices in order to create controversy and draw viewers which is despicable.
@CaptanF0rever8 ай бұрын
Hey now, explosive fruit is a VERY likely culprit. 😅
@Neel-17 ай бұрын
This is why Netflix documentaries are trash and should be taken with a grain of salt.
@WagTheDog_8137 ай бұрын
Media's goal is in their words, a story with " legs" . One that keeps going and going. Despicable.
@MrPhillipsTheChangeAgent6 ай бұрын
I think it’s too convenient. The guy was practicing something similar on his computer. He would know people would check his computers and such. Why does he not want plane to be found. Why go through all this. He could have crashed anywhere. I wish people would provide some theories.
@CaptanF0rever6 ай бұрын
@@MrPhillipsTheChangeAgent if he was angry with the airline or country, he could have done it to spite them. Show the public their incompetence and flaws in a historical fashion. It's like a supervillain version of a worker going "postal" in the mail industry.
@JRQUION Жыл бұрын
This is the closure i needed just as an observer, i cant imagine how much it adds to the story for those more closely affected. Thank you.
@gabriellea71242 ай бұрын
Absolutely the best take on this tragedy. The time and research you put into your videos is why you’re one of the best accounts on here. Thank you!
@mikeletaurus4728 Жыл бұрын
This upload has garnered so many comments, you probably won't have a chance to read this one. But if you do, I want to tell you how superbly produced it is! I wish you every success with your channel, and please continue making fascinating and factual videos! Thanks for all of the hard work you put into producing them.
@GreenDotAviation Жыл бұрын
Thank you so much! There will be many more videos to come ✈️
@-Jethro- Жыл бұрын
Subscribed 👍
@phoneyphone Жыл бұрын
Cute
@ibrahimsadiq9050 Жыл бұрын
Plz what I don't understand is how did they have all this information especially after the plane went of the Rader,.. yet they can't find the plane.. so who gave them d information of what happend inside d plane?.. am confused
@phoneyphone Жыл бұрын
@@ibrahimsadiq9050 guessing and inserting details to make a compelling story
@arminoleg16245 ай бұрын
Whatever epic plan you have to leave this world don’t take people with you man. Whatever reason you have, that you no longer want to live, the innocent life you want to take with you don’t share the feeling. They want to see their mother or brother, their sister or daughter, their friends and family again. It’s sad that these innocent people unknowingly became part of someone’s death wish. And I can only imagine that first officer who worked hard to become a pilot had to go down with the plane that would have been his last as a trainee. Very sad and tragic.
@Eddo158784 ай бұрын
This happened again with the German wings flight a year later
@itzyomg80523 ай бұрын
That type of people don't care about their own life, why would they care about the lives of others?
@richardosborne20673 ай бұрын
Amen,and you will stand accountable before the Great White Throne on that day.
@ahmadjauhar45623 ай бұрын
That masterplan was crazy tho, gotta admirt that the man was smart n committed
@arminoleg16243 ай бұрын
@@itzyomg8052 I get being in pain or just not caring about your own life but lot of people who commit suicide would never think of harming others in the process.
@charlesbosse96692 ай бұрын
This is the best documentary I've seen on this subject. So much evidence points to the captain doing these things,shutting things off and on again. Only someone with a lot of experience would know how to do this.
@vmi41725 ай бұрын
This is the most logical explanation right here. Maybe the most accurate video I've seen so far regarding 370. Im surprised so many people are going on about crazy conspiracy theories. Sometimes it's just as simple as using your common sense. Like I just said, this video right here is based on the most logical theory. People need to stop trying to fit squares into circles.
@jesperhammarlund3005 ай бұрын
exactly. but people just can't accept the truth sometimes. instead they come up other stupid theories. its the same with the moon landing and global warming
@OliviaRehrig4 ай бұрын
100% agree.
@benclark48234 ай бұрын
So “common sense” is a well known captain with no known history of mental health issues and good job with great pay and a loving family with a good wife and two children WANTED and was WILLING to intentionally crash his plane into the Pacific Ocean for no apparent reason other than to commit mass suicide with EVERYONE on board including HIMSELF because reasons??? 🤨
@istrumguitars2 ай бұрын
Yeah, you said it. Occam’s razor-the simplest explanation is usually the right one.
@monikamonika7422Ай бұрын
you glow in the dark
@mthandenimathebula2846 Жыл бұрын
Hi Green Dot, I'm a Level D Simulator Engineer and previously a Aircraft Tech. I REALLY appreciate your documentaries and aircraft knowledge and how you execute it. I've watched other channels but I find myself not finishing their videos because of how far off from quality and delivery compared to yours. I even remake those events during my Sim tests to test out various functions, as required, and keeps my knowledge current and sharp. I keep up the Great work and as always, I'll be waiting for you next upload.
@debs-101 Жыл бұрын
Did you watch the recent 2-parter done by The Lore Lodge? It was as painful as it was infuriating. I went in with an open mind and genuinely hoped it would give me another perspective to at least understand why others believe some of the conspiracies. I had to stop it multiple times and force myself to go back to finish it, and it only made me less understanding of the wild theories out there. I’m curious to know what others thought of it after watching Green Dots narrative.
@mthandenimathebula2846 Жыл бұрын
@@debs-101 I don't know that channel, I'll check it out.
@DovioneMcQueen6 ай бұрын
Yes!! I love this
@saumanka8 ай бұрын
I can understand how much effort you have put to make this documentary, I have watched many videos of Mh 370 but your video truly stands 'Head and shoulders' among all. To make a documentary you need real facts which you have provided and one needs a great 'voice' which you have. A job really well done.
@generalscoob909521 күн бұрын
Absolutely outstanding video. It’s amazing that television documentaries come nowhere close to replicating the level of detail you’ve put into this video. Thank you for all your work!
@JaasviniSatthiaseelan7 ай бұрын
As a Malaysian, this particular aviation incident always hits hard and this was especially something that had been the talk of the whole country throughout the following years even after 2014, as expected. I was 10 back then, in my tahun 4 when articles about this were in every each newspaper. I still remember my dad forcing me to read through the newspaper and making me recite the incident back to him (mostly to make sure i would improve my malay language skills) back then, i just wanted to get the reading done with but the reality and seriousness of the situation only hit me when i was much older and now looking back, it gives me a very sick, disturbing feeling or a sad sense of nostalgia at the very least. I still talk about this with my friends and others, this incident created a horrifying history / memory in the country, one which is etched forever in all hearts and minds of the people of Malaysia. I'm 20 this year and in uni now, it's been a whole decade and this video really made me somewhat emotional, great job on the work 🩷 i hope all the passengers are flying high now (no pun intended) you will always be in our memories MH370 💐
@ramatgan14 ай бұрын
The US shot down the plane. It was carrying sensitive technology for China.
@tylerm26764 ай бұрын
Damn bro, that's deep... I never even thought how the incident could freeze a nation... and at the end we don't really know the actual truth... cause they really don't want us to know.
@evelyntomology11 ай бұрын
I put off this video because I thought I'd heard it all - keeping up with news, with updates, with documentaries. But this put all the pieces together. I've heard bits and pieces of this story - most of which you covered - but that were discovered early on in the investigation, only to either get swept under the rug or ignored since it didn't fit a single narrative. Thank you for putting this video together, it really cleared things up, especially since you add sources.
@michael-4k400010 ай бұрын
Its all most all ways the pilot error.
@nrnoble10 ай бұрын
There is no evidence that the pilot caused the disappearance. It is huge disappointment that this quality YT channel would create a video that states speculation as facts.
@zowiereneefiles9 ай бұрын
@@nrnoblehe says so many times to at these aren’t facts and just the most plausible explanation due to evidence 🤦🏻♀️ you clearly don’t listen
@_soups9 ай бұрын
@@nrnobleCompletely idiotic comment. It was made very clear by the uploader what the purpose and aim for this video was. If you can’t figure that out, there is no hope for you.
@citizendot18009 ай бұрын
58:40, They should investigate the first officers who was with Zahari on Feb 21st flight. I'm guessing, he tried to distract the first officer, but he couldn't able to persuade first office to leave the cabin. Or something like this might happened. Investigators should definitely talk to first officers on Feb 21st flight.
@joshb69938 ай бұрын
Intriguing possibility there
@KlaxontheImpailr8 ай бұрын
Yeah, no harm being thorough.
@TheeMcMas8 ай бұрын
There was 2 sets of crews on the flight MH150 that day it left for Jeddah not Beijing, Zahari purchased his internal hardrive on Dec 21st, 2023 and had this simiulation deleted on February 2nd, 2024 a couple weeks before the flight to Jeddah, Zahari and his First Officer only flew half way to Jeddah and half way back, they were experienced pilots on both sectors of this flight who would not have left the cockpit, MH370 First Officer may have in all probality left the cabin and tried to use his cell phone to alert ATC that he was locked out of the cabin during this madness by Capt Zahari before the plane was pressurized killing all occupants on board.
@joshb69938 ай бұрын
@@TheeMcMas interesting
@pablorubio82878 ай бұрын
and even, the ATC tapes. Did Zaharie miss the frequency on the readback that time too?
@amberhill8395Ай бұрын
Thank you for all the time and effort put into producing this video. I cannot imagine the pain those friends and family experienced when they realised the plane won't be landing, nor will their loved ones be coming home. This video was produced with great respect to them. This video has made me into an absolutely teary mess. My only way to cope is to hope and pray they all just fell asleep peacefully without fear.
@andrewwscott2802 Жыл бұрын
I work in media and have a good sense of how much work must have gone into the making of this video. Absolutely fantastic job, one of the best aviation videos -- maybe the best -- I have ever seen. Gripping, informative, perfectly edited, not a wasted second nor a single useless repeat just to fill time. Lots of great info I previously didn't know. Calm, reasoned and thought out. I've watched quite a few of your videos and they are excellent, but this one just takes the cake! You nailed it!
@tundecsovak7817 Жыл бұрын
I totally agree
@dupes6248 Жыл бұрын
Agreed
@abaez008 Жыл бұрын
Only criticism…. There were moments when I said “you made that up… how could you know that detail…” otherwise amazing video
@andrewwscott2802 Жыл бұрын
@@abaez008 I agree, but he did say this was the most likely scenario from the available information, so those "made up" details are educated best guesses. It would have been clumsy if he said "our best guess is" over and over. I agree with you, it really is an amazing video.
@joerourkework Жыл бұрын
It is more fiction than truth...
@Akshayadeep_Singh Жыл бұрын
For 5 long years , I've been waiting for someone to make a detailed video on flight mh370. I'm so obsessed with this topic that I seek for a new video or a documentary every now and then. 60 minutes Australia made an amazing documentary (the situation room) and I always thought nobody could better them in terms of details but you have topped it with this one, extremely well knit. I'm lucky to have found this video today.
@patrickponthieux3939 Жыл бұрын
I have also been obsessed with what happened to the flight. These switches should be set that this can't ever be done again.
@noexonolife65 Жыл бұрын
Personally I really like Lemmino’s video on this flight too! However this one does have some information that I hadn’t heard about before
@Loggsie1990 Жыл бұрын
Four corners also did a great documentary about it kzbin.info/www/bejne/pKbOpn-AaJ6cZrcsi=xLN0By9YJvqrvVMs
@chilaxil3981 Жыл бұрын
It's going to be 10 year next year March.
@C7vette7 Жыл бұрын
I dont understand why they let a clinically depressed person continue being a captain and fly
@1532JJ Жыл бұрын
Whilst the scenario discussed in this video is rare, the fact that a pilot is able to do all these things like turning off the signals to the ground, locking out the other pilot etc, seems baffling. We've seen several instances of death by pilot in the last 10 years or so. I feel like the airline industry needs to make adjustments, such as giving the co-pilot and pilot their own separate codes to access the cockpit and not allow one person in the cockpit so lock them out.
@ErinJeanette Жыл бұрын
They have the deny button no matter what in case a highjacker gets any code opening the door which is still the same problem if the copilot has his own code or a third secret code which is just as secret as the second code.
@1532JJ Жыл бұрын
@@ErinJeanette Since 2001, there have been around 10 successful hijackings which involved an passenger forcing their way onto the flight deck. And there hasn't been a single innocent casualty or incident of a plane flying into a ground structure. Yet the death toll from death by pilot since 2013 alone stands at 554. Hijackings are virtually unheard these days and are even more rare when they involve a person with suicidal motives. You do not compromise safety by allowing the pilot/co-pilot the ability to override being locked out of the cockpit by the other member of the flight crew. But it would have prevented MH370, GermanWings Flight 9525 and China Eastern Airlines Flight 5735. The scenario you're imagining, where a hijacker gets access to a code which allows them onto the flight deck, is so far fetched.
@ErinJeanette Жыл бұрын
@@1532JJ I'm not saying you're wrong, I just think that's the reason because I said the same thing, I couldn't BELIEVE a pilot was able to do any of this and shut their communication off essentially to the world and then lock a copilot out that's insane!
@theBitcoinLedger Жыл бұрын
Truly ironic that due to 911, when there were likely no hijackers, just digital manipulation or drones, people think hijacking is a common threat to everyday fight travel. So rare especially with all the security technology used just to board a flight.
@cristinec9139 Жыл бұрын
As cabin crew I can tell you that we do have procedures that contradict some parts of this video. For example, at no time is the cockpit occupied by only one person. The purser, or lead flight attendant would have been in there if the first officer had come out.
@faresadayleh488Ай бұрын
I believe this is the most reasonable explanation of what has happened Good job 👏🏻
@jukio02 Жыл бұрын
It's crazy that it's almost been 10 years since this happened.
@floresnashvilledrummer Жыл бұрын
Couldn't believe it when he said that.
@sonnylatchstring Жыл бұрын
Just a simple calculation.
@thesauce1682 Жыл бұрын
🤓 "just a simpke calculation"
@phoneyphone Жыл бұрын
Did you expect time to stop or what
@prit8vi Жыл бұрын
@@phoneyphonepretty sure they meant that time flew faster than ever but alright.
@armandorjusino Жыл бұрын
This creator is one of the best on KZbin. This was like watching an Oscar winning suspense movie, truly a genius at work.
@thelastboyscott Жыл бұрын
I couldn’t stop watching. I just didn’t like how he continually used CCTV footage showing nothing.
@NeatNaut Жыл бұрын
I think this is the most possible theory of them all so far. It's also hauntingly eerie and horrifying. It almost sparks a fear similar to the fear you'd get if you were lost in the vacuum of space - cut off from everyone, slowly waiting for death. This scenario is also beautifully presented in this video. You guys' amazing skill at video ambience stands out here and sends shivers down your spine. This video needs to receive some award.
@GreenDotAviation Жыл бұрын
That's much appreciated, thank you. It is an incredibly eerie scenario.
@scootermom1791 Жыл бұрын
I agree! It's very well done.
@aquablast3155 Жыл бұрын
@@GreenDotAviation I've learned a lot thanks to your videos! I've never truly understood why air accidents happen until watching your videos, as well as how heroic/resourceful some of these captains had to be in order to save their planes. (And how bad the airline standard/training in my country, Indonesia, is.) But I have a question-- was there a big discovery/development that allowed you guys to zero in on this theory? I actually remembered watching a video covering this here-- I remembered the details about the captain having the flight simulator on this exact path, as well as that sharp turn toward the South that made everyone look for the wrong spot in the Indian Ocean-- but some of details are new-- like the intentional depressurizing of the cabin... Did that actually happen (like was it actually done in the flight simulator?), or was it just the most likely theory, since that's pretty much the best way for the captain to get rid of everyone who could meddle with this bizarre plan? (Or did I miss something, perhaps like something explained in the opening? Anyone is free to point out/answer for me too.) (I want to share this video with a friend, but I'd like to be able to explain if there was some sort of new development that made this refined theory possible.) Maybe I'm giving the captain too much credit, but I wonder if he was trying to prove how disastrous things can get if the captain of a plane were actually malicious...
@rafbarkway5280 Жыл бұрын
There was at least ten man hours of Oxygen in the cabin? and the crew sat down and used the overheads, thats logical. SO, they assume given that amount of oxygen, that no one could get through the cockpit door. I could, and so could many engineers.Were there any engineering types aboard? OH, just a few! the door is designed to stop a determined hijacker,not several clever people with at least half an hour of oxygen. It is designed to deny entry in a reasonable amount of time, so I assumed there was not enough oxygen avaliable in the cabin for anyone to spend half an hour or more on the door, but apparently there was! Also, the SATCOM had no AC supply, the Left hand AC bus was down for a while. How many systems does that degrade? ALSO, the transponder transmitting a height of 0ft prior to going off completely. I need to see the evidence...Secondery radar operates by transmitting a transpond request to the aircraft WHEN the radar antenna is pointing to it. So, are you saying a change happened in that small window of time, or the next sweep? More questions than answers.... The one question I would like answered, how many people on board were pilots themselves?
@ehilton7044 Жыл бұрын
@@GreenDotAviation You are amazing, this one is your best one yet. Can I ask you though your opinion, could this guy have stolen this aircraft to sell on? Obs to do so he would have had to kill the passengers. Change his name, get on with his life a few million pounds better off?
@smartiee7424 күн бұрын
This is the best veer of this story I've ever seen. I've been watching your channel for some time now but only came across this today and I realized I had never subscribed previously. I definitely hit the subscribe button today. Keep up the good work. 10 years later and this still boggles my mind....
@ArchLars Жыл бұрын
I feel for the first officer in the moment when he realized he was being shut out of the cockpit by his captain. Aside from the captain he was the only one who knew what was going on in that moment. How horrifying that must have been.
@bored-x5s Жыл бұрын
This is something else, never seen, never heard, never tried. A sharp mind made us fly and a sharp mind made us crash. Humans are unbelievable.
@darkhacker8747 Жыл бұрын
But how does the investigators know what occurred on the plane in terms of the copilot being told to make coffee and then being locked out and putting in the code etc
@alanaremor Жыл бұрын
@@darkhacker8747That’s exactly what I was going to ask.
@bored-x5s Жыл бұрын
@@darkhacker8747 Lol, There will always be more questions than answers. Look at glass half full.
@dookie3453 Жыл бұрын
@@darkhacker8747it’s not clear from the video but these are all just things that could have possibly happened. The only true facts are the few signals that were received from the plane and its presence on the military radars. Everything else is simple speculation
@TheShahkulu Жыл бұрын
Omg… when I saw how long the video was I honestly thought I'd just watch 5 or 10 minutes then click off, but this video was so gripping, well narrated and animated I watched the whole thing. I can't believe a documentary of this quality is on KZbin. Well done 👍
@Coolcarting Жыл бұрын
This is not a documentary, it is a docudrama.
@nrnoble Жыл бұрын
Be careful, this is not a documentary, 90% of it is speculation, not fact. It presents speculation as being fact. All claims about what happened inside the plane is 100% fiction. Nobody knows what happened inside the plane.
@sumitmandal5710 Жыл бұрын
Agreed
@soothingcloud5599 Жыл бұрын
Same here! Intriguing
@ShuntaeJohnson Жыл бұрын
Me Too Great Work
@ErickKhan Жыл бұрын
I love this and DB Cooper's stories and the lore behind them; such a shame Netflix absolutely butchered both of them. Unwatchable series'
@rODIUMuk Жыл бұрын
The Netflix series was amazing. This was a great video too.
@StfuSiriusly Жыл бұрын
how did netflix butcher the mh370 story??
@Teajohn Жыл бұрын
how do i keep finding erick in the comments lmao i swear we watch the same shit
@chdreturns Жыл бұрын
There's a reason I haven't had a NetSHITs subscription since 2017. Trash show selection, trash originals, their gaming division buying games that people have paid for and locking them out of being able to play the games they paid for upon adding said games to service... I wish people would just stop using Netflix.
@nathanknight6042 Жыл бұрын
Best Flight Simulator 2024 advertisement, hands-down
@Holtan_NАй бұрын
Wow.This has to be the best documentary i have ever seen.Good job making this im impressed
@harveysmith10011 ай бұрын
I have an unusual interest in MH370. I am married to a Malaysian Airline cabin crew. I was in the UK at the time and although I knew she wasn't rostered for this flight she did report around the same time. Last minute changes in the crew room can happen so it was a long wait for me as her Whatsapp message didn't deliver as she didn't have reception on the island she was night stopping. Anyway she was fine. She knew the Captain and a lot of the crew on MH370, always really sad in any airline. She said he was a lovely guy and she couldn't believe he would kill himself. He had everything to live for, despite going through a divorce. Possibly confirmation bias, I had always remembered the large amount of Lithium Ion batteries in the cargo. Many times what is legally allowed to be carried on European carriers. That along with my wife's words, I have seen this as a tragic accident. This video has changed all that. My wife would defend a colleague as most of us would so it isn't a reliable source. The Captain was a Muslim and in their faith, suicide would bring such shame on his family. It is a massive taboo. Was this the perfect suicide that would always be hidden? Or so he thought. I watched this video as I have so many about MH370 but this time the tiny details started to paint a more clear picture. The transponder: This was the first massive clue to me. I am a pilot so have an understanding of aircraft systems. If it was a fire due to Lithium as I have previously thought and you lost the transponder, it would just go dead, it wouldn't cycle through any functions. That one piece of evidence was enough for me. Someone physically turned off the transponder. I carried on watching and it became increasingly difficult to go against suicide. I know the area really well, his planning was meticulous. He knew the Malaysian military would be half asleep, monitoring in the early hours. (Malaysia is a very laid back country.) What I thought was a stricken aircraft desperately trying to get back to KLIA wasn't the case. My first thought was loss of communication due to fire and the first thought was to get back to the most familiar runways. The route up the Straights of Malacca was spot on. Anyone can see on Flightradar 24 how busy this is. Finally, if there was a tiny doubt left in my mind, the home sim was the final straw. This video was the not only the best on MH 370, it is one of the best on aircraft accidents. Brilliant detail. Many thanks.
@shawonahmed577511 ай бұрын
I have lack of aviation knowledge, just a basic question to you: Why didn't any other aircraft detect the presence of MH370 while it was flying over the southern Indian ocean? Don't aircrafts detect large objects, such as another airplane, using sensors, even if the satellite transponder is off?
@michaelho401411 ай бұрын
@@shawonahmed5775if you are talking about the ability of aircraft to detect other aircraft at night without needing Air Traffic Control, then there is a technology for that called Traffic Collision Avoidance System (TCAS). TCAS involves the transponders of at least 2 nearby planes communicating to each other altitude, speed, position and heading information of the planes they are installed in. If TCAS systems on 2 planes detects that said 2 planes are about to collide then it sends out audio instructions to the pilots of the respective aircraft on what action to take, mainly to climb or descend. When there is no longer a threat of mid-air collision it sends out the message “clear of conflict”. But despite offloading quite a lot of work from ATC controllers who being human are still prone to human errors, TCAS has 2 big potential weaknesses. 1) unlike Stick Pushers (an anti-stall system installed on some commercial aircraft to augment the usual stall warning systems) TCAS is not capable of directly forcing the plane to climb or descend if the pilots do not respond to it or properly follow its instructions (descend instead of climb for example). And 2) TCAS depends on the transponder being on and properly functioning. Weakness number 1 is one of the primary contributing factors behind the 2002 Uberlingen mid-air collision in which a DHL 757 freighter and a chartered Bashkirian Airlines Tupolev Tu-154 collided in mid-air over the Swiss-German border. The DHL crew followed their TCAS instruction to descend, but the Russian crew in the Tu-154 followed the ATC controller’s instruction to descend instead of following their TCAS instruction to climb. By the time the 2 planes saw each other the closing speeds were such that there was almost no way to avoid the collision. Why the Russian crew did not follow their TCAS instruction was primarily down to cultural issues and TCAS being a relatively new technology at the time. Even though TCAS had been under development since the 1980s, it was only in the 1990s to turn of the millennium era was TCAS made mandatory equipment on civilian airliners whether old, newly built or newly designed. In the western aviation world, if pilots encountered TCAS giving instructions that were different to that given by a ATC controller, they were trained to follow TCAS instructions and inform the controller of such. But everywhere else in the world and the former Soviet states in this case, there was no such training for this kind of scenario, and because ATC has historically been nearly infallible despite humans being in the feedback loop, the Russian pilots followed the ATC controller’s instructions instead of TCAS even though TCAS was correct and the controller was wrong. After this collision, all pilot training worldwide mandated that TCAS instructions always take precedent over ATC. Weakness 2 means that if a transponder is off (as in MH370), malfunctioning or accidentally put into the wrong mode, then TCAS in said plane won’t work even if the transponder and TCAS in a nearby plane is working. In 2006, a brand new Embraer Legacy business jet sliced the wing off a Gol Transportes Aeroes 737 over the Amazon rainforest in a head-on mid-air collision in 37,000 feet. The Embraer jet successfully landed at a military airfield but the 737 crashed. At the moment of the collision, the Embraer jet’s transponder was in standby mode (basically transponder off) and its TCAS would not be on in that mode. In addition, systemic administrative and training related flaws in Brazilian area ATC meant that Brazilian controllers handling the plane thought the Embraer was at its assigned altitude of 36,000 feet instead of its actual altitude of 37,000 feet (important to note that Embraer’s flight plan called for an initial cruise altitude of 37,000 feet then descend to 36,000 feet after passing the Brasilia VOR radio beacon). The thing is, ATC instructions, because they are told live to the pilots as they are flying, can always override filed flight plans in case of unusual circumstances. And due to the confusion in the area ATC, Brazilian controllers did not tell the Embraer to descend to 36,000 feet since they thought it was there already. Why the Embraer’s transponder was shut off is debated to this day, but the theory with the most weight (presented by Brazilian investigators) was that the Embraer pilots accidentally shut it off while they were troubleshooting the plane’s systems (its also important to note that preparations for this flight were pretty rushed, explaining why they were problem solving in the air instead of before the flight). Neither pilot noticed the “TCAS OFF” message on their flight displays, both troubleshooting the problem instead of one solving the problem whilst the other pays attention to their instruments as per their likely Crew Resource Management training. But at the time, if TCAS is turned off whilst the plane is airborne, it wasn’t mandatory to have an audible warning to tell pilots TCAS was off - just messages on the flight display in the case of the Embraer plane. If you look at the Strait of Malacca on Flightradar24 (which tracks civilian aircraft and some military aircraft using ADS-B) you will notice that it’s a moderately trafficked air corridor dominated by planes heading to and from northwest of Singapore airport. How MH370 could successfully navigate this corridor at 2 am without colliding with other planes due to no TCAS can be explained by a combination of half asleep night shift civilian and military ATC controllers, and the fact that this is a very off-peak time period for airports in Malaysia, Singapore and Indonesia.
@michaelho401411 ай бұрын
@@shawonahmed5775 if you are talking about the ability of aircraft to detect other aircraft at night without needing Air Traffic Control, then there is a technology for that called Traffic Collision Avoidance System (TCAS). TCAS involves the transponders of at least 2 nearby planes communicating to each other altitude, speed, position and heading information of the planes they are installed in. If TCAS systems on 2 planes detects that said 2 planes are about to collide then it sends out audio instructions to the pilots of the respective aircraft on what action to take, mainly to climb or descend. When there is no longer a threat of mid-air collision it sends out the message “clear of conflict”. But despite offloading quite a lot of work from ATC controllers who being human are still prone to human errors, TCAS has 2 big potential weaknesses. 1) unlike Stick Pushers (an anti-stall system installed on some commercial aircraft to augment the usual stall warning systems) TCAS is not capable of directly forcing the plane to climb or descend if the pilots do not respond to it or properly follow its instructions (descend instead of climb for example). And 2) TCAS depends on the transponder being on and properly functioning. Weakness number 1 is one of the primary contributing factors behind the 2002 Uberlingen mid-air collision in which a DHL 757 freighter and a chartered Bashkirian Airlines Tupolev Tu-154 collided in mid-air over the Swiss-German border. The DHL crew followed their TCAS instruction to descend, but the Russian crew in the Tu-154 followed the ATC controller’s instruction to descend instead of following their TCAS instruction to climb. By the time the 2 planes saw each other the closing speeds were such that there was almost no way to avoid the collision. Why the Russian crew did not follow their TCAS instruction was primarily down to cultural issues and TCAS being a relatively new technology at the time. Even though TCAS had been under development since the 1980s, it was only in the 1990s to turn of the millennium era was TCAS made mandatory equipment on civilian airliners whether old, newly built or newly designed. In the western aviation world, if pilots encountered TCAS giving instructions that were different to that given by a ATC controller, they were trained to follow TCAS instructions and inform the controller of such. But everywhere else in the world and the former Soviet states in this case, there was no such training for this kind of scenario, and because ATC has historically been nearly infallible despite humans being in the feedback loop, the Russian pilots followed the ATC controller’s instructions instead of TCAS even though TCAS was correct and the controller was wrong. After this collision, all pilot training worldwide mandated that TCAS instructions always take precedent over ATC. Weakness 2 means that if a transponder is off (as in MH370), malfunctioning or accidentally put into the wrong mode, then TCAS in said plane won’t work even if the transponder and TCAS in a nearby plane is working. In 2006, a brand new Embraer Legacy business jet sliced the wing off a Gol Transportes Aeroes 737 over the Amazon rainforest in a head-on mid-air collision in 37,000 feet. The Embraer jet successfully landed at a military airfield but the 737 crashed. At the moment of the collision, the Embraer jet’s transponder was in standby mode (basically transponder off) and its TCAS would not be on in that mode. In addition, systemic administrative and training related flaws in Brazilian area ATC meant that Brazilian controllers handling the plane thought the Embraer was at its assigned altitude of 36,000 feet instead of its actual altitude of 37,000 feet (important to note that Embraer’s flight plan called for an initial cruise altitude of 37,000 feet then descend to 36,000 feet after passing the Brasilia VOR radio beacon). The thing is, ATC instructions, because they are told live to the pilots as they are flying, can always override filed flight plans in case of unusual circumstances. And due to the confusion in the area ATC, Brazilian controllers did not tell the Embraer to descend to 36,000 feet since they thought it was there already. Why the Embraer’s transponder was shut off is debated to this day, but the theory with the most weight (presented by Brazilian investigators) was that the Embraer pilots accidentally shut it off while they were troubleshooting the plane’s systems (its also important to note that preparations for this flight were pretty rushed, explaining why they were problem solving in the air instead of before the flight). Neither pilot noticed the “TCAS OFF” message on their flight displays, both troubleshooting the problem instead of one solving the problem whilst the other pays attention to their instruments as per their likely Crew Resource Management training. But at the time, if TCAS is turned off whilst the plane is airborne, it wasn’t mandatory to have an audible warning to tell pilots TCAS was off - just messages on the flight display in the case of the Embraer plane. If you look at the Strait of Malacca on Flightradar24 (which tracks civilian aircraft and some military aircraft using ADS-B) you will notice that it’s a moderately trafficked air corridor dominated by planes heading to and from northwest of Singapore airport. How MH370 could successfully navigate this corridor at 2 am without colliding with other planes despite having no TCAS can be explained by a combination of half asleep night shift civilian and military ATC controllers, and the fact that this is a very off-peak time period for airports in Malaysia, Singapore and Indonesia. In addition, the plane’s flight path involved attempting to follow the borders of flight information regions aka it was flying along the edge of the radar coverage of various area control centers in Sumatra and Malaysia. And even though radars do overlap into the FIRs of other countries, because of the Chicago convention of 1944, the area ATC controllers who might have seen MH370’s unidentified blip on primary radar may have assumed it was under the control of the adjacent area control center instead of theirs. In addition, tired or complacent controllers in the middle of the night may not picked up the fact that there was a plane with no transponder flying ALONG FIR borders instead of into or out of them.
@sparklepix11 ай бұрын
I feel for his family, and the other affected by this tradegy, but foul play seems very clear from this video. I do hope the bulk of the wreckage is found soon to give the families with missing lost ones closure.
@malhdshorts11 ай бұрын
@@shawonahmed57751. The southern Indian ocean is vastly empty and is really large. 2. Aircrafts can't detect other aircrafts. The ATC does that for them. So an aircraft doesn't know there is a plane near them until the ATC alerts them. For example when flying in fog. The ATC alerts them of where nearby aircraft are but the aircraft themselves cant detect each other.
@sandro7827 Жыл бұрын
You never cease to keep me engaged and entertained. I've now watched every single video of yours multiple times through, and it's really just dawning on me why I prefer your channel so much more than other aviation ones. You really put a ton of effort in the simulator software to not only show flight maneuvers but even the small stuff like flipping switches. I know absolutely zero about flying, and I even have a huge fear of flying (so of COURSE I would spend hours a week watching videos of flying disasters). The clips you put into the video though, they help explain what is going on, and why it's impactful to the chain of events. It's also much better than other channels that keep a static image and just move a little plane on a map, or recycle the same clip over and over through the whole video. High quality content. Great narration. 12 out of 10 stars! Keep it up! This one was hugely entertaining.
@GreenDotAviation Жыл бұрын
I'm glad these details add up! We put a lot of working into getting the small things right :)
@diaperamess Жыл бұрын
agreed, the simulator software is HUGE for someone like me who needs visual aids during a story. other channels will just have stock images or clips and it's so boring.
@shaz8486 Жыл бұрын
Agree, I have actually unsubscribed to some I now only watch two channels, this is the best IMO. I am no flying expert either, just love finding out the why ….. Great video !
@augustusplays78968 ай бұрын
@@GreenDotAviationso why did he do it
@puneetbhardwaj977111 ай бұрын
Best documentary ever made on the disappeance of MH 370. Very logical and practical approach
@TheGreatDanish11 ай бұрын
Its not documentary. Its creative writing. Anything that takes place on the plane is speculation at best, completely made up at worst.
@jonfreeman968211 ай бұрын
It's logical hypothesis of what likely happened. All the pieces fit.
@luxemier11 ай бұрын
the netflix 'documentary' was actual creative writing. this is more of a documentary explaining what happened with filling some of the gaps with assumptioms@@TheGreatDanish
@snavshandvask991811 ай бұрын
@@luxemierthe Netflix documentary was definitely something else than this video, this video is many levels above. But both are technically creative writing, because no video will EVER be able to tell you what actually happened during that flight. This video definitely tells you what MOST LIKELY happened, but without the black box we wouldn’t even be close to determine anything with certainty. Filling “some of the gaps” with assumptions is in my opinion treating this video a bit too lightly, there’s a lot of assumptions in this video, seemingly great assumptions! LEMMiNOs video of this incident is a true example of a documentary of what happened, because that video never assumes anything that isn’t actually known, with proof backing it up. This video and LEMMiNOs is the two most educational videos that exist for people wanting to know what this tragedy was actually about
@seriessplayer6274711 ай бұрын
@@TheGreatDanishthis was the most likely scenario, a 777 doesn’t just disappear… wide body planes so many back up systems
@josebonito601328 күн бұрын
Wow this is hands down the BEST documentary I’ve ever seen or heard or anything, on this topic, so far. Great fckng job dude.
@shreyjha621211 ай бұрын
This makes me appreciate the sheer amount of safety technologies present in a flight
@L188widower11 ай бұрын
Well done! Great work!
@GreenDotAviation11 ай бұрын
Thank you!
@ExiledStardust Жыл бұрын
Absolutely riveting. I thought I had heard everything about this case but I have never seen it presented in such a compelling way. Bravo.
@mikerodent3164 Жыл бұрын
This was excellent and very convincing, unlike the offensive, ghoulish cack being doled out on Netflux and so many thousands of websites. There is one thing though: I was really hoping he'd at least give the latest assessments of Richard Godfrey and his WSPR flightpath identification theories. In fact this still seems to be plausible. However the path calculated by using WSPR (OTHR) is not straight, suggesting the Zaharie didn't just switch into auto-pilot. mh370search dortkom.
@georghaupftink7372 Жыл бұрын
This was excellent and very convincing, unlike the offensive, ghoulish conspiracy nonsense still being doled out on Netflux and so many thousands of websites. There is one thing though: I was really hoping he'd at least give the latest assessments of Richard Godfrey and his WSPR flightpath identification theories. In fact this still seems to be plausible. However the path calculated by using WSPR (OTHR) is not straight, suggesting the Zaharie didn't switch into auto-pilot. But the evidence of a rapid final descent is very convincing. mh370search dortkom.
@MikeRodent-wp6ci Жыл бұрын
This was excellent and very convincing, unlike the offensive, ghoulish conspiracy rubbish being doled out on Netflux and so many thousands of websites. There is one thing though: I was really hoping he'd at least give the latest assessments of Richard Godfrey and his WSPR flightpath identification theories. In fact this still seems to be plausible. However the path calculated by using WSPR (OTHR) is not straight, suggesting the Zaharie didn't just switch into auto-pilot. mh370search dortkom.
@sharky56493 Жыл бұрын
Apologies to those who were fascinated with this video. This is one of the most baseless doc on MH370 ever produced. Blurring the boundary between facts and fiction. How in the world, this guy knows the specific details of what the Captain told his first captain when the plane's black box has never been found. Sweater and coffee, making holes in the plane, utter nonsense!! You cannot make someone guilty until it's proven and you cannot prove something based on fiction.
@ofc_buggs_1w0334 ай бұрын
Put together like listening to an audio book. Very well done
@lonemaus5629 ай бұрын
I feel bad for the first officer.. your one day away from being considered a captain and your trainer kills u..what a sick world we live in
@moemonte888 ай бұрын
Well, considering we don’t know what happened.. what a sick world we live in.
@molester46728 ай бұрын
@@moemonte88the plane hit water hard. Based of the debris, The captain is obviously at fault for this incident
@moemonte888 ай бұрын
@@molester4672 ok
@CastleMc8 ай бұрын
Bad people are as old as humanity, not new
@julianhodgson19618 ай бұрын
@@moemonte88we don’t know what happened but I bet you there are people high up in the Malaysian government who know exactly what happened.
@ELMS Жыл бұрын
Im not a pilot, but decades ago I flew in the jump seat of a 767 on an hours-long transcontinental flight across Canada. I spent the entire flight on the flight deck. And I did notice that after a while it’s easy to forget there is an airplane back there. Your little world kind of ends at the cockpit bulkhead. This was a really excellent presentation.
@ZSC92 Жыл бұрын
Hahahaha pilot?? OMG
@sigstenbockgard8080 Жыл бұрын
@@ZSC92 what?
@lordforgivemeforiamazynner Жыл бұрын
idiot@@francesco245
@AverageAlien Жыл бұрын
@@francesco245moron
@Kinghobbe Жыл бұрын
@@francesco245 Theories are theories, your concern for one dead guy and scenario looks like you don't care about the passengers who died but then I suppose if you are trolling uselessly it is fine.
@cx29555 ай бұрын
This is actually insanely accurate out of all of the theories I’ve seen, great job.
@shoury_prasad3 күн бұрын
Timestamps 00:03 - Malaysia Airlines flight 370 disappeared under mysterious circumstances 02:28 - Captain Zahari was an experienced pilot with over 18,000 flying hours. 07:15 - Flight 370 was routine until it reached cruising altitude 09:37 - Captain Zahari planned to make the plane vanish from radar with precision. 13:48 - The captain disabled the ACARS system to make the plane disappear. 16:00 - Captain successfully hid the aircraft and planned to incapacitate everyone on board. 20:01 - Radar detects objects in the air 21:55 - Pilots needed to descend to a breathable altitude to ensure oxygen supply for passengers and crew. 25:38-Malaysian civilian controllers handed the plane off to Hoi Min in Vietnam, leaving flight 370 in limbo. 27:33 - The first officer faced a challenge opening the cockpit door 31:35 - The engineer replenished the Pilot's oxygen system, sparking panic and concern. 33:29 - Malaysian Flight 370 faced critical issues with air traffic control and passenger safety. 37:21 - The first officer's phone briefly connected to a cell tower at Panang 39:17 - Flight 370's tracking system projected its last known position into the future. 42:59 - Flight 370 went dark due to software manipulation 45:00 - Zahari successfully reconfigured the plane and disappeared into the night 48:38 - Satellite signal analysis revealed the possible location of Flight 370 on a ring. 50:34 - The Malaysia Airlines operations center faced challenges in contacting Flight 370 54:15 - Flight 370's disappearance raises suspicious questions about the timing of turns and evading detection. 56:05-Captain Zahari potentially practiced a similar flight route on his home flight simulator to the missing plane's route. 59:57 - The disappearance of Malaysian Flight 370 in the Southern Indian Ocean 1:01:53 - Flight 370 was still in the air, unknown to rescuers. 1:05:50 - Satellite signals revealed Flight 370's descent and speed changes 1:07:44 - Malaysian Flight 370 plunged into the ocean after a steep turn and pieces of wreckage were found along the shorelines of Africa and nearby islands. 1:11:35 - Expert opinions on Flight 370's unresolved key questions and implications for search efforts
@NinaadDas9 ай бұрын
Your work is really filling up the gap for my thirst of National Geographic Channel's Air Crash Investigations.
@GreenDotAviation9 ай бұрын
I'm glad!
@mariabeatrizlopezperalta56819 ай бұрын
@@GreenDotAviationout of pure curiosity, may I ask how did they recover the (erased) flight simulation data from the home computer? Great video, it woke me up from my sleepiness from start to end! Other comments recommended your channel, I'm glad I checked.
@journeyforyou56009 ай бұрын
@@mariabeatrizlopezperalta5681 the same confusing question with me
@nimmha67089 ай бұрын
@@journeyforyou5600 To a good hacker or let's say IT specialist, nothing is forever deleted. And most data can be found again.
@Piecrab8 ай бұрын
@@mariabeatrizlopezperalta5681 @journeyforyou5600 When you delete something off a hard-drive, you're not actually deleting it. You are just telling the controller of the hard-drive that the place where the data was stored is now to be considered free space. You have to fill that free space with new files for the data to be actually erased.
@PenguFKnight11 ай бұрын
The most damning evidence, despite it not being enough, is most definitely the flight simulator's record of the exact path that coincided with every point the satellite handshakes were done. Like honestly, it's hard to believe that he WASN'T the culprit at this point.
@DeclanHiggins__11 ай бұрын
Flight sim data was different. FBI ruled it a dead end. The journalist that reported it also is the same one from the Netflix show about the Russian hackers
@wrathofatlantis231611 ай бұрын
@@DeclanHiggins__ Any attempt to exculpate the captain strikes me as lame in the extreme. You have a crime with just one possible suspect, and you still can't get it right?
@DeclanHiggins__11 ай бұрын
@@wrathofatlantis2316 I never made a claim about the captains guilt or innocence, I just merely pointed out that the flight sim data is not strong evidence
@wrathofatlantis231611 ай бұрын
@@DeclanHiggins__ Fair enough. So on the flight sim there was no strange prolonged flights to nowhere over the Indian ocean (or similar odd course reversals to nowhere in different directions), and there was no detected attempt to erase those particular flight paths at the exclusion of others? That would indeed make the sim connection just an urban legend. Of course that would change nothing as to his guilt, but it is interesting that such a claim would be widely disseminated with nothing to support it. Wouldn't be the first time.
@DeclanHiggins__11 ай бұрын
@@wrathofatlantis2316 well the thing is, we don’t know. It was found on an old Hard drive in a fragmented file with literally thousands of cached locations. The FBI ended up dismissing it because it wasn’t really evidence. There’s no way to tell the locations were even from the same flight. All it could tell them was that in some point in the captains flight simming, his plane was in those locations, as well as thousands of other locations in the file. I think the much more damming evidence against the captain is that the flight transponder was manually switched off
@Ano-Nymous Жыл бұрын
I tried to catch every news regarding MH370 (except the Netflix documentary). This is the first time I've heard that when you manually switch off the radar, the transponder for a split second inevitably goes into the mode that only hides the flight altitude. Such a big giveaway that I didn't hear of before. Great job in not just collecting and filtering information, but in presenting it the way you did. Hope your work pays off. Good luck with your channel and all the best to you!
@onebigadvocado6376 Жыл бұрын
100% on the transponder. Such a smoking gun, especially given it came seconds after the handover to Ho Chi Minh ATC. It all but definitively proves it was Zaharie.
@iolanndaa Жыл бұрын
The Netflix documentary is quite interesting too but I think of all theories this one seems to be the most accurate sadly we’ll never know
@dpm2937 Жыл бұрын
@@iolanndaaOne thing I did like about the Netflix documentary was the mention of unlisted cargo. I am not saying I buy into the conspiracy they spun up out of it but I do find that little fact interesting.
@Ano-Nymous Жыл бұрын
@@iolanndaa Although just a theory the provided evidence is very conclusive. All we're missing at this point is the plane. And regarding this I won't say we'll never know. Just a question of time. If you and me will be lucky enough might be different though. ;) Hope you are! =) Wish you all the best.
@delilah28100 Жыл бұрын
I've watched almost everything related to MH370 and it's not the first time the transponder theory was mentioned. 60 Minutes Australia have done MH 370 documentaries and their last year's docu is one of the best kzbin.info/www/bejne/eZSsqKdol7d3ocUsi=PECkVyHTLBiNejxq
@TallerLeanerYoungerwithDrSimon26 күн бұрын
Incredible incredible story... I've watched this 8 or 9 times now... Incredible... Thankyou for the efforts mate
@GreenDotAviation26 күн бұрын
Glad you liked it
@TallerLeanerYoungerwithDrSimon19 күн бұрын
@GreenDotAviation so much mate.. so so much .. ohhhhhhhhhh... Brilliant story telling... And I finally worked out how to leave a comment so I'll make sure I leave a comment on all your videos.. I watch them often. And appreciate them incredibly.. have a great day!..
@sebastianbach1151 Жыл бұрын
This is by far the best documentary I've seen in years about MH370. The clarity and balance of facts vs theories are spot on. Rest in peace to the passengers and crew, wherever they are.
@danielch6662 Жыл бұрын
Except that they are slandering a man with no evidence whatsoever. WTF do they think it is Zahari? Could have been the co-pilot. Could have been a cabin crew. Could have been a passenger who hijacked the aircraft. Flying the aircraft is not that complicated. Anybody could do it with a few hours research watching videos on KZbin. You just use the auto-pilot. It's the takeoff and landings that's more difficult. You could probably learn how to program the flight computer with a few days of online research. It cannot be that complicated.
@conconshealthdiary1153 Жыл бұрын
@@danielch6662i thought the same thing, what if it is the co pilot or someone else.
@chriz9959 Жыл бұрын
at least they did not suffer much apparently
@chriz9959 Жыл бұрын
i dont think that anyone but the captain was capable off doing it, since the route suggests a lot of experience in flying between radars, zones etc, and he also practiced this flight at home on his computer. you really should watch the whole vid again@@danielch6662
@kryts27 Жыл бұрын
@@danielch6662 Too much advanced systems shut-downs at well timed locations in the air were carried out to be rogue cabin crews, passengers or terrorists. This was a well timed act of a well-trained pilot or a flight engineer on board the aircraft.
@ducky9678 Жыл бұрын
oh my god, i've watched every single one of GDA's videos and this one is the best one yet. the quality increased so much over the months! keep up the good work
@booradley0x07 ай бұрын
I’m from Perth and this really freaked me out, knowing as I watched this unfold on tv, the window behind my tv looking out into the Indian Ocean, in all that blue darkness, the plane was out there somewhere.
@prod.steezey8835 ай бұрын
That was really poetic
@ramatgan14 ай бұрын
The US shot down the plane. It was carrying sensitive technology for China.
@belicia92934 ай бұрын
What u said was somehow rlly deep.
@TheTrvlr4 ай бұрын
Poetic indeed
@HJustme8552 ай бұрын
Good work 👍 So much more coherent than so much of info and documentaries out there. Really impressively put together.
@michaelb1716 Жыл бұрын
I can't praise this production enough. The effort and research that must go into it....writing the script and delivering the narration must be incredibly difficult but you have done an exceptional job! Bravo, and thank you for such an important piece of work!
I agree with 98% of this scenerio. However I believe that the Captain stayed in control of the plane until the very end. Gliding the plane after fuel exhaustion with a smooth water landing to minimalize the amount of debris being scattered in the water
@eniohiroyukieto29196 ай бұрын
I think the same, ditched the airplane
@Raeodor6 ай бұрын
Yea but the steep descent at the end. Thats not a gliding descent.
@xmindk5 ай бұрын
More then that,i think in the last hours he open the pilot door and inspect the whole airplane,drink some cofee and sweets before the crash!
@Rajatkumar-dm5uf5 ай бұрын
I watched an another documentary in which it was mentioned that in the last minutes before sinking the flight flew in infinite shape pattern ♾just to confirm if no fisherman or humans are there below which can lead to plane being relocated.
@vandala975 ай бұрын
@@Rajatkumar-dm5ufThat’s on of the most isolated places on earth there is no land in radius of thousands of kilometers, no boat corridors no plane routes -nothing is there.
@Sunless-shade Жыл бұрын
I sleep with KZbin on and typically let it auto play through documentaries. The sound gives me something to listen to as I settle down for sleep. I saw this video in suggested while looking for something to put on to go to bed.... But that was a mistake because an hour later I would still be awake, listening to every detail and totally captivated. Totally fantastic work. Worth delaying bedtime an hour over! Worth the views it's getting. Glad to see hard work become so successful.
@Mypenisissmallbut Жыл бұрын
I do that too and KZbin will think because it auto played some random ass 4 hour livestream while I slept that all I wanna see is random ass 4 hour livestreams.
@dannyhernandez2203 Жыл бұрын
Don't you start dreaming about what you're hearing? I can't rest when the videos keep on playing