MALAYSIA AIRLINES FLIGHT 370 DISAPPEARANCE | Detective Ridiculous
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- čas přidán 15. 06. 2024
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Malaysia Airlines Flight 370 (MH370/MAS370) was an international passenger flight operated by Malaysia Airlines that disappeared from radar on 8 March 2014, while flying from Kuala Lumpur International Airport in Malaysia to its planned destination, Beijing Capital International Airport in China. The cause of its disappearance has not been determined. - Zábava
'Air travel is the safest form of transport'
Boeing- "So i took that personally"
I'm pretty sure that, even with Boeing acting with criminal negligence, air travel is still safer than most if not all ways to travel ^^
Even still, a Boeing 777 has never crashed due to mechanical failure*
*with the possible exception of this one, because we just don't know
Next April fools day y’all should bring detective ridiculous back. Not permanently but get a good topic that you can make like a 3 hour episode on for old times sake
blud is cooking
Hell yeah!
This would be an amazing thing for them to do once a year every april 1st just a big single episode
The whole mess with the different radar stations talking back and forth is the reason why almost all European countries have harmonized their civilian air traffic control.
Hi. Half Thai who lived almost 30 years in Thailand here. We don't have that many enemies, so there is really no need to call the jets as a first sign of reaction. Most likely, it was simply assumed to be a non threat. Our military isn't really on full alert for war.
Yeah my first thought as someone who used to do military communications was like, if I was in the field and saw a radar ping, nobody has told me about a missing plane. I don't know all of the flight paths, nor would I be in communication with an air traffic control center even if I did see something weird
RIP Detective Ridiculous
Any bets on if anyone makes a 'it passed through the warp' joke?
Bet
lets see
I know a suckers bet when I see it
I thought that the moment i saw the video pop up
that would be just too predictable
though i just gotta ask, anybody checked Trazyn's Vault lately? just throwing that out there....
People forget how hard it is to find ANYTHING in the ocean.
Its MASSIVE, constantly moving and you can sink in it, the onky reason we have any idea at all where our ships are is down to gps. You loose that conection and it may as well be in london as far as you know.
not to mention nobody's bothered to actually explore it entirely, only all the 'landmarks' down there
we have better maps of mars than the ocean
@@Biodeamon actually its less tgat the ocean floor isnt mapped, we have a fairly good map, its just that the thousands of feet of liquid above it is effectivley several hundred maps layed on top of each other that are constantly changing.
If something quickly sinks and we know where it was we usually find it alright, but even a slight current grabs it and its GONE.
Another issue is not the size of the ocean, but the size of the airplane. Rather, the parts of the airplane. If it really came down from maximum altitute to crash into the ocean, already breaking apart mid-air, there will only be small parts of the airplane scattered over the ocean floor, which will be way more difficult to pick up by future searches than a large shipwreck like the Titanic.
The only part that could somewhat realistically have been found was the flight recorder, assuming that it survived the crash to still send out signals from the bottom of the ocean. Yet even then by now the batteries have long since been exhausted.
@Nickname-ef9tv And the only reason we found the Titanic in the first place is because Robert Ballard decided to give the idea that Titanic broke in half (Which was considered a myth at the time) some genuine thought.
With his experience gained working for the US navy, he found the wreck.
Kinda sad that Detectice Ridiculous will go out soon. Was fun hearig DK telling Bricky the horrors of the world
im from Malaysia, Kuala lumpur and this case really hit us hard..Final episode of the Detective Ridiculous and it end with the mystery of flight 370, thanks to u guys for the thoroughly explanation..condolence to all the families..
ayoooo.
Goodbye DR, it's been my favorite series on the channel, and I came here for the warhammer lmao
Bricky not knowing normal pop songs makes him a damn senior citizen
Some of us refuse to listen to the ear-rot that is modern radio.
I'm in my mid 20's. I haven't listened to radio voluntarily in at least 8 years.
Or maybe he just doesn't like pop. This isn't the 80s anymore, with the internet everyone can have a completely unique media experience, there aren't as many shared experiences as there used to be.
Excited for Fantasy Warhammer but I certainly will miss this podcast. Either way here for it all!
Oh boy can’t wait to think about this on all 4 connection flights I’ve got tomorrow
never thought I see malaysia mentioned on this channel.
sadly RIP detective ridiculous
As a fellow Malaysian, i tend to agree
The APU is not a battery, it's a turbine that generates only electrical power but no thrust. Airliners with a ETOPS (or EDTO) certification over a certain time need to have four independent power sources. One the 777 that would be the two engines, the APU and the ram air turbine. There are batteries but they're only there to provide the absolute minimum and to keep the computers running until either the APU turns on or the ram air turbine is deployed.
6:56 A 365-day year has 8760 hours. The Captain spent well over two years in the cockpit, over one year of the type of the airplane that got lost.
If I remember correctly, that number included simulator hours. But did have an impressive n7mber of actual flight hours
@@Man_Emperor_of_Mankind Some regulations say pilots may not spend more than 1000 hours per year in the cockpit. Which is about half the work time of a normal workplace but considering the highly irregular work pace reasonable. Since he was in his fifties he may have very well accumulated 20k actual flight hours, in any case he was an experienced pilot.
The pilot: WE'RE GOIN TO ANTARCTICA BOIIIIIIIIIS
If the plane depressurised quickly enough then the passangers would have been knocked out almost instantly.
Im kinda dark in that i think everyone except whoever was flying the plane was dead not long after takeoff
The stagnation of technology is absolutely just a mirage; technology is still increasing in great leaps regularly, but a lot of it isn't commercially viable, and corporations are extremely keen on maintaining commercial viability and pushing the most cost effective products over the most advanced products.
Two years!! Jeez time flies, it's been a good though. Gonna miss these episodes but I think keeping two shows is smart can't wait for fantasy to kick off
Bricky, if you knew what I know about those DUKWs, you probably wouldn't have been so excited. Duck tours have an awful habit of killing people due to neglected maintenance.
I remember going on one something like a decade ago. And then I heard they were retired because they had acquired this embarassing habit of sinking. I don't think anyone died, but yeah, those things clearly weren't built to last this long.
Comfirmed: Bricky is NOT an emo kid growing up
He was the nerd in a goth/emp group
The idea that "technology doubles every x years" is called Moore's Law and it is very misunderstood by most people. It was an observation (by an engineer named Moore) that the number of transistors (THE key component that makes modern computing possible) that can fit on a given surface area doubled every year as transistors became increasingly smaller. However, in the last few years, transistors were developed on a molecular scale, reaching the physical limit of how small they can ever be. It is now generally accepted within the computer engineering field that Moore's Law is no longer applicable to future technological developments, and that technological stagnation should be considered as a possibility.
detective ridiculous will be missed U - U
Please don't let directive ridiculous stop here, these are debatably my favorite videos
Last episode of Detective Ridiculous will be Jack the Ripper. I know it!
That's a pretty good guess, ye.
Ooooooh. Yeah that's a solid guess.
Wasn't expecting something from my country to be covered here. But it's an interesting insight on how little facts we actually know
Definitely a meaty topic to send off Detective Rediculous with. Going to miss these episodes.
It's Wild to me that I started listening to this 2 episodes into the Adeptus ridiculous podcast and it's become my favorite warhammer based podcast and DK is fantastic at the detective ridiculous stuff I'm excited to see his Fantasy content
Going to miss these episodes 😢 easily the best thing you guys do.
Looking forward to the Fantasy content!
I'd recommend starting with a general overview of the planet and a quick pitch for each faction, then get into more dedicated episodes like your previous Skaven one. A huge factor in the series is the location of each nation and how they interact with each other.
On the subject of being able to scan the bottom of the ocean-we can right now. The issue is that its done via satalites that scan a very detailed narrow strip at a time and the ocean is HUGE. Like incredibly vast. We regularly increase the speed with which we can survey it but there is a LONG way to go before we have anything like a complete picture or could scan an area reactively like we would need for it to be useful for this sort of search.
My dad was a 20-year Air Force pilot and received a plaque for clocking maybe 5k or 6k hours, so 20k seems a little insane; but to be fair, a commercial pilot is probably pulling more flight hours doing multiple trips daily than a military pilot who's only going out on missions and training.
Military airplanes have a whole different strain during flying and require easily 10 hours of maintenance per hour of flight. Civilian airplanes by comparison can, depending on the type, spend more than 1/4 of therir time in the air.
Frankly, I think it's probably a non religious based suicide by the pilot. The truth people don't want to admit sometimes is that suicidal people (especially men) do not leave a note and may not show any signs of wanting to die. As for the final movements of the plane, maybe he regretted it and wanted to reverse course, but who knows for sure. Sad story.
That happened before hasnt it? Where a pilot basically did a mass murder suicide by crashing the plane into the ground
@@thecrtf4953 A couple of times.
One example is Germanwings flight 9525 from 2015. The co-pilot crashed the plane into the French Alps via autopilot after he locked the pilot out of the cockpit, ironically through measures installed after 9-11. The blackbox recorded the pilot shouting through the door, the passengers must have been aware that something was going on.
It was later found that the co-pilot had become suicidal as psychological issues led to him being declared unfit for flying by doctors (which he hid from his employers). Records from earlier flights revealed he had made autopilot test runs.
No suicide note was found.
@@thecrtf4953 I think so. Wouldn't surprise me anyway.
IIRC, there’s a theory that the plane went down over or near a very deep trench, and one of the arguments that the pilot was still alive at the end is that the final movements of the plane may have been him attempting to guide the plane so that it would hit the water where it would then sink into the trench to prevent any attempt to retrieve it.
@@thecrtf4953The only thing I can remember ist the Germanwings flight. The pilot crashed into the Alps in France. But that happened one year later.
Please, PLEASE bring at least Unidentified Signal Back!
I still find it odd how they turned all of the transponders off.
Aww man, I liked Detective Ridiculous the most. :(
I think the last Detective Ridiculous episode should be about Jack the Ripper.
I kept searching for that eerie background music you used in detective ridiculous videos. No result...
Excited for this one!!
Noooo :((( I will miss detective ridiculous dearly ❤ thank you for the two years of great content
Rip detective Rediculous. I'll miss this dearly
Great video
I hope Detective Ridiculous comes back in the future. This has been a very fun series. Totally get wanting to take a break from it to do other stuff, I just hope y'all will circle back to it down the line.
Im gonna miss detective ridiculous
The APU is a turbine engine in the tail that provides electrical and pneumatic power when the main engines aren't running or if the demand is high. That whining sound you hear when you're in the plane at the gate is the APU running. Commercial planes also have what's called a RAT. it looks like a little wind turbine and is deployed in an emergency for electrical and hydraulic power. I always look forward to the monthly detective episode. I'm going to miss it.
So Aircraft Mechanic here to “well actually”a few things:
1.APU is not a battery its a turbine that pulls fuel from the main source to run electronics most of the time while its sitting on the ground it also supplies air to start the main motors (That’s a whole lesson on pneumatics I dont want to teach) it also provides AC and hydraulic power to do tests. The R.A.T (ram air turbine) is a small pinwheel that deploys that generates power to emergency systems
2. There is no crumple zones the nose has radar antenna. The plane crashes hard enough where it crumples its a lost cause
3.) Aircraft oxygen has a service limit provided by manufacturers (usually 1000psi) if a pilot asked me to top it off to make him feel safer I would kindly in the most corporate way tell him to fuck off. There’s so much paperwork that goes into servicing or maintaining any part of an aircraft if it’s good it’s good.
Love when y’all do bits about planes
Nice video.
For a man who claims to fly so often, Bricky sure has a problem understanding that you cannot call or send calls whilr 20,000 feet above the middle of the indian ocean
Lake Superior is huge. The Indian Ocean makes Lake Superior look like a pothole after a rainy day.
We honestly don’t have enough information for any theory really. I personally think there was some sort of error, or a cascading series. Maybe a power surge, maybe some technical defect, I think the biggest problem here is the sudden elevation and turn. To me, suicide would not require that, you’d just ignore anyone and anything if you have cabin control. I mean, how could anyone stop a hijacked plane from outside the plane. To me, Occam’s razor is something outside of the pilots’ control.
I’m listening to this while at ACO!!!
ROFL Bricky: "I mean... it's no PACIFIC Ocean..."
Last time i was this early
Horus Was With Us
Noooooo, I love detective ridiculous 😢
I like how Malaysian (our) witch doctor tries to find the plane using coconuts,two wooden tubes, a mattress and a bucket
he said plane was stuck in the air. thats not how physics work
I really hope they make a schedule where one weeks 40k probably second or thirds a fantasy and finals detective ridiculous i love this stuff so much
I remember seeing this on the news almost every day, crazy situation.
Also sad to see Detective ridiculous go into the walls, hopefully it will be brought out of the walls some day
In 31:00 I think that comparing radio discipline to the oxygen reserves is a bit silly. I mean, being a bit lazy or funny or arrogant on radio is a lot different than life saving emergency system. That being said! It is a bit odd, but nothing to build a conspiracy theory on - yet. (Let's see, there's an hour more to listen.)
My life is over when you end Det Rid. I love it. Please don't stop!!!!!!
First time live 😂👍🏻
Bricky being unable to comprehend a signal dead spot is hilarious.
God bless you, Shy, for 1:08:00. I was screaming at my phone for a good hour before that, going "Bricks, you dense potato, you don't just find a random bundle of cell signal just hanging around above 10K ft. How the hell is that not comming through to you?" my blood boiling. So thanks.
As for the Thai military capability, they're definitely not as advanced as the US or Europe, but they should have absolutely been able to track a fucking passenger plane, transponder or no. I wonder what might be revealed if those Thai military documents ever get declassified.
Yeah, I have a hard time believing that many countries with a military don't have at least some kind of ability to track with radar.
After all, the big players tend to sell off their outdated tech.
1: During peacetimes militaries can became rather lax.
2: South east Asia is not the EU, the countries there are often deeply distrustful to each other, being very unwilling to share any military data.
3: Much depends on where a military expects a potential threat to come from. During 9/11 the US military was unable to track the hijacked planes as their eyes were set on potential outside threats.
Right off the bat, an average criminal intro.
You're all wrong.
The APU is, to make this as short as possible, a small jet engine in the back of the plane that's there to provide electrical power and air pressure to some of the systems on board.
Planes do have batteries but for the most part they're not used.
the final episode this series covers MH370 that should be something I should've read about thoroughly since I'm Malaysian, but I'm only jumping into it now.
Thanks guys, I think this was fated for me 😂
I love you guys but as a former radar operator that's not even something that radars do "projected flight path"
1:25:35 I have to agree with you DK, and that's due to us hitting the point where Moore's Law (The idea that the number of transistors you can fit on a microchip doubles every two years) failed in the 2010's. Therefore, are computing power hasn't been increasing as exponentially as it once was.
While that might be true small scale computers, scanning the ocean also involves many forms of scanning technology, wich doesn't necessarily need Moore's Law to improve.
@@davisdf3064 Yes, but the conversation was about how technological development feels slower than it used to. Current Conservative estimates put our oceans being essentially completely transparent to sensors by 2060.
The APU (Aux Power Unit) on most airplanes is essentially a small generator, so you would have aircraft grade fuel on board, but it was usually used to kickstart electronics on the ground, until the main jet engines could start powering your electronics. What is important to know is that some planes may have a fuel line running between engines and APU but I am not sure whether that is the case on every plane or only some.
I remember the duck boat tours. One of the best things I did in the South as a child
It kinda hurts when Bricky calls the internet a crazy big technological leap; the connections were there before people adopted it, the science was understood, the leap forward was in adoption and price of infrastructure not the capabilities of any one pinnacle machine. As such it's easy to say we don't know how to scan the ocean floor yet, and even when we do we'll then need an indeterminate amount of time to actually Do it.
I am gonna miss Adeptus Ridiculous. I genuinely prefer it over Fantasy lore.
Detective Ridiculous is ending, the 40k episodes aren't, there's still much more to cover.
Fantasy is awesome though, and these three numbskulls may be fun enough that you'll enjoy the episodes regardless!
@@Sercotani I genuinely am not interested in Fantasy lore, I think it's by far the weakest of the Warham lore. I'd rather see DK do more real stories, he's great at it.
When I bought a new external 1TB hard drive, it was hard to explain to my dad just how much of a substantial upgrade it was compared to my older one. Eventually, I settled on how many 1MB pictures you could fit on a drive and how just five years prior, I had bought my old drive for the same price, but it could only hold about 12,000 pictures compared to the 1,000,000 pictures of the new one. Yeah, technological advancement is not plateuing; it could possibly plateu in the next decade or so, but that's still a hotly-debated theory.
The idea of being a passenger who probably has no idea what's happening as things start going wrong is horrifying
DK you might wanna to a bit of research into how various power dependent and generating systems on modern airliners function. They don't need the whole plane "powered on" and run with automated APU's that generate power from little turbines that automatically deploy when power is lost as well as bleedoff power generation from the engines turbines freespinning when shutdown but still receiving airflow.
All of those satellite and network pings received from the jet are from automated systems that have no human input as to whether they're running or not unless you go pulling circuit breakers and manually lock auto opening doors and turbines into ground maintenance modes which you can't do unless its physically on the ground on its wheels. The FL (flight level/altitude) tracks match with the autopilot continuing on last input course and losing fuel then gliding and losing altitude, it matches perfectly with a loss of pressure event incapacitating the crew after a casualty (mechanical or not who knows) caused them to make that sharp turn.
1:25:40 technology is going up even faster now, but not for the general population. We only have access to stuff that can be sold to us and made cheap so it will break faster so we have to buy now ones.
The vertical range of a cell tower seems to be a fraction of the planes altitude after the incident began, further supporting the theory that the pilot chose his altitude and how long he was up there in order to avoid a cell connection.
I believe it was stated that the flight logs on the captian's computer was pieced together over a dozen or so simulations. Also i belive there was a jursitiction dispute over the computer and who could take the files; so that's why the info is muddied.
My headcannon is that a catastrophic error occurred on board so they tried to turn back before becoming one of those "Ghost flights"
No mention of the quack witch doctor who used bamboo and coconuts to look for the plane?
Disappointed!!😂
I never understood why things like transponders and other location providing tools can be turned off on an airplane manually. That stuff should be always on, and in a similar hard to destroy case like blackboxes - you know, for a) - plane is hijacked, still can be easily tracked from the ground; b) - plane goes missing/down and you still know where to look for it.
Elevators are the safest form of travel, factfiend did a vid on it too. The most who die from elevators are almost exclusively elevator repairmen
I remember watching the headlines to this.
Quite sad
Anyone else hear "it was a boeing 777" and just wasn't surprised
Isn't 777 like one of the safest aircraft families?
An Auxiliary Power Unit (APU) is a generator. So, it's has fuel and it supplies power, so they're both kinda right.
There are a few people I showed this channel to that don't know Warhammer or care about it and watch just for DR. I feel bad for those people now...
There is a documentary that talks abaut the possibly financial stress, basically the pilot and his family will loose their house, cars, properties etc etc based on financial records that someone, well, most probably find them in not a legal way, the documentary didn’t say it directly but it leave it in the context of the situation
For the radar saying they were in Cambodia, Im sure it probably extrapolated position based on the last data received. Tech does this all the time since data comes in with gaps and it updates when it gets a new packet of data. Id guess that they probably update the location only like every minute or so. Not sure why it wouldnt have raised an error when it hadnt gotten new data for 20 minutes or so though.
Anybody interested in more plane related incidents including this one, should check out black box down podcast, it ended so there won't be new episodes but it's got a few years of episodes that are really good and in depth by someone who was training to be a pilot while making the pod.
47:47 Correction, military of my country, Thailand, delay it for like 10 days for reason that people at the time assumed it to be simply to spite Malaysia.
Home country mentioned!
DK: "Technology seems to have stagnated...."
Technology w/ Ai, Lidar & Fusion Generators:
"AM I A JOKE TO YOU!"
It’s a small audience but have you considered making some of your posters into coasters in packs?
1:25:03 there’s a perun video on submarine detection you should watch… cuz uh… yah, that exactly.
I nam surprised Bricky didn't know Rolls-Royce made engines. Have been since WW2. Maybe even before.
Never forget when Don Lemon on CNN suggested that maybe the plane flew into a black hole and that's why we can't find it
I’m excited for Warhammer Fantasy content 😊
not even 2 days after this aired new info just came out. they think they know where it crashed thanks to hydrophones used to detect nukes
When I see my country gets mentioned anywhere it’s usually nothing good.
Any one here interested you could look up more about Malaysia’s controversies, it’s interesting, funny, horrific and sad but mostly sad.
Betting on either Jack the Ripper, Bigfoot or something related to ghosts (we still haven't gotten a ghost related episode) for the grand finale.
EDIT: DK, for the love of all that is holy, if Bricky knows about the next topic, start the episode with a quote and make him guess it!