srichards
Suspended / Banned
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- 10,968
- Name
- Suz
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How can the air traffic system lose something the size of a massive aircraft? I know there are transponders on planes but relying on this alone seems naive. Are the skies not regularly scanned for flying things that don't have transponders? If they aren't, why not?
If planes do have transponders that can be turned off which person decided that was a good idea? To me it seems a no brainer that the transponder is inaccessible and cannot be turned off under any circumstances and for any reason. If not a secondary or even tertiary transponder should take over if the first or second stops working. The transponder should also be able to survive falling out of the sky and have a method of notifying air traffic control it is falling out of the sky and where it is . This way they can actually find the plane quickly and have a clue where it went down.
This time a flight from Algiers has disappeared. They don't know where it is!
If planes do have transponders that can be turned off which person decided that was a good idea? To me it seems a no brainer that the transponder is inaccessible and cannot be turned off under any circumstances and for any reason. If not a secondary or even tertiary transponder should take over if the first or second stops working. The transponder should also be able to survive falling out of the sky and have a method of notifying air traffic control it is falling out of the sky and where it is . This way they can actually find the plane quickly and have a clue where it went down.
This time a flight from Algiers has disappeared. They don't know where it is!

