Author Topic: Flight Path And Related Issues  (Read 758869 times)

Offline Chaucer

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Re: Flight Path And Related Issues
« Reply #3810 on: December 14, 2020, 04:57:32 PM »
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The fact that the money was found along the Columbia upstream from where the plane crossed over is in my mind a clue that he jumped near the Columbia

This could also give credit to a western path..
This would require actual physical evidence of a Western flight path of which there is none.
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Offline georger

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Re: Flight Path And Related Issues
« Reply #3811 on: December 14, 2020, 11:26:43 PM »
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The fact that the money was found along the Columbia upstream from where the plane crossed over is in my mind a clue that he jumped near the Columbia

This could also give credit to a western path..
This would require actual physical evidence of a Western flight path of which there is none.

Lets first eliminate the fact of a river and the dredging ........ then posit the mere position of the money has something to do with the flight path ! ?

Amazes me how R99 conveniently rigs the stage without even blushing!

Next move: just eliminate the airplane! Now R99 can posit any flight path he wants for any plane - anywhere, any time. Based on the money find only. Maybe the plane involved flew over in FEBRUARY 1980!  It was Cooper himself seeding Tina Bar! Tina was the co-pilot. Anderson was flying behind Cooper. BIG FBI COVER UP! The planes took off from the street in front of Tina's house. There were witnesses! Finegold for one! All redacted from the Transcripts too ...

 :rofl: :congrats: 
« Last Edit: December 14, 2020, 11:34:09 PM by georger »
 

Offline Robert99

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Re: Flight Path And Related Issues
« Reply #3812 on: December 15, 2020, 01:03:17 AM »
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The fact that the money was found along the Columbia upstream from where the plane crossed over is in my mind a clue that he jumped near the Columbia

This could also give credit to a western path..
This would require actual physical evidence of a Western flight path of which there is none.

Lets first eliminate the fact of a river and the dredging ........ then posit the mere position of the money has something to do with the flight path ! ?

Amazes me how R99 conveniently rigs the stage without even blushing!

Next move: just eliminate the airplane! Now R99 can posit any flight path he wants for any plane - anywhere, any time. Based on the money find only. Maybe the plane involved flew over in FEBRUARY 1980!  It was Cooper himself seeding Tina Bar! Tina was the co-pilot. Anderson was flying behind Cooper. BIG FBI COVER UP! The planes took off from the street in front of Tina's house. There were witnesses! Finegold for one! All redacted from the Transcripts too ...

 :rofl: :congrats:

Just more of the usual nonsense from Georger.
 

Offline georger

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Re: Flight Path And Related Issues
« Reply #3813 on: December 15, 2020, 04:57:12 AM »
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The fact that the money was found along the Columbia upstream from where the plane crossed over is in my mind a clue that he jumped near the Columbia

This could also give credit to a western path..
This would require actual physical evidence of a Western flight path of which there is none.

Lets first eliminate the fact of a river and the dredging ........ then posit the mere position of the money has something to do with the flight path ! ?

Amazes me how R99 conveniently rigs the stage without even blushing!

Next move: just eliminate the airplane! Now R99 can posit any flight path he wants for any plane - anywhere, any time. Based on the money find only. Maybe the plane involved flew over in FEBRUARY 1980!  It was Cooper himself seeding Tina Bar! Tina was the co-pilot. Anderson was flying behind Cooper. BIG FBI COVER UP! The planes took off from the street in front of Tina's house. There were witnesses! Finegold for one! All redacted from the Transcripts too ...

 :rofl: :congrats:

Just more of the usual nonsense from Georger.

No. Its what you are doing. Your claim is that the only thing that could cause money to be at TBar is the plane flying over TBar. And just ignore the river, and dredging, etc. That is exactly what you are saying-doing. In addition you keep insisting over and over, quote: "Water flows down hill". Conveniently flow down hill to ..... Tina Bar. Where else!

You wont allow anything else to even be discussed. No river. No dredging. And if it turns out forensic evidence says the money arrived in 1973 ... you wont allow that either.

Moma Nicholson dont 'lau no music round here'! Just the tune he wants.

Its so ridiculous a third grader could see it.   
« Last Edit: December 15, 2020, 05:08:50 AM by georger »
 

Offline fcastle866

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Re: Flight Path And Related Issues
« Reply #3814 on: December 15, 2020, 11:31:45 AM »
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The question isn't where the plane was. We know it was generally along Victor 23 for most of the trip south from Seattle. The question is when did Cooper jump. The flight crew reported oscillations between 8:10 and 8:12. At this point, they stated that "he must be doing something with the stairs". We have no documented record of when the pressure bump occurred. No time stamp, nothing. All we have are the statements of the pilots after the fact : "lights of the suburbs of Portland", "10 to 15 minutes after last contact".

As a result, the jump could have occurred anywhere between Orchards and the Columbia.

The fact that the money was found along the Columbia upstream from where the plane crossed over is in my mind a clue that he jumped near the Columbia.

Chaucer: Refresh me on how you get Orchards as the northern most jump point and not Battle Ground.  Also, are you saying there was no pressure bump, or that there were oscillations and a pressure bump, or that there was a pressure bump but we don't know the time?

The pressure bump conversation predates you by quite a bit, so it is not a new theory, I'm just wondering about it and figured it would be a good question.
 

Offline Chaucer

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Re: Flight Path And Related Issues
« Reply #3815 on: December 15, 2020, 12:33:02 PM »
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The question isn't where the plane was. We know it was generally along Victor 23 for most of the trip south from Seattle. The question is when did Cooper jump. The flight crew reported oscillations between 8:10 and 8:12. At this point, they stated that "he must be doing something with the stairs". We have no documented record of when the pressure bump occurred. No time stamp, nothing. All we have are the statements of the pilots after the fact : "lights of the suburbs of Portland", "10 to 15 minutes after last contact".

As a result, the jump could have occurred anywhere between Orchards and the Columbia.

The fact that the money was found along the Columbia upstream from where the plane crossed over is in my mind a clue that he jumped near the Columbia.

Chaucer: Refresh me on how you get Orchards as the northern most jump point and not Battle Ground.  Also, are you saying there was no pressure bump, or that there were oscillations and a pressure bump, or that there was a pressure bump but we don't know the time?

The pressure bump conversation predates you by quite a bit, so it is not a new theory, I'm just wondering about it and figured it would be a good question.
I'm going by the time along the flight path.

8:05 was the  last time the flight crew hear from Cooper when he responded to them on the intercom that "everything was OK"

8:10 was the first time there are any reports of "oscillations" (FBI Vault, Part 41, p. 31 & 32)

8:12 was the last time there are any reports of "oscillations".(FBI Vault, Part 41, p. 31 & 32)  At this point the plane was just east of LaCenter.

There is no official report of a "pressure bump" which is generally used as the point at which Cooper jumped causing the stairs to swing back up. We don't know when that took place, but we know it took place AFTER 8:12 because the oscillations preceded the pressure bump.

So, while we don't have an exact time of the pressure bump, we do have pilot statements. Rat said initially that the pressure bump was felt 5 to 10 minutes after last contact (8:05). That would put the bump between 8:10 and 8:15. We know it can't be between 8:10 and 8:12 because that is when the oscillations are happening. So it would have to happen between 8:13 and 8:15. However, Rat later told Carr that the pressure bump occurred 10 to 15 minutes after last contact (8:05). This would give you a range between 8:15 and 8:20 for the pressure bump.

However, further statements by the crew were that the pressure bump occurred when "the lights of the suburbs of Portland were visible" but they "had not yet crossed the Columbia. The plane crossed over the Columbia at 8:17, so we can eliminate any bump happening after 8:17.

Thus, the timing of the oscillations combined with the statements of the pilot give a range between 8:13 and 8:17 for Cooper jumping and causing the pressure bump. The median of this time range is 8:15. At 8:15 the plane is over the Orchards area.

In actuality, the northernmost jump point IS just north of Battleground and the southernmost would be the northern banks of the Columbia. I used Orchards as a center between the two.

My contention is that the jump occurred in the 8:16/8:17 time frame and Cooper and/or the money came to rest very near the banks of the Columbia.

Sorry that was so wordy. I'll be happy to clarify anything.
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Offline georger

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Re: Flight Path And Related Issues
« Reply #3816 on: December 15, 2020, 01:36:49 PM »
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The question isn't where the plane was. We know it was generally along Victor 23 for most of the trip south from Seattle. The question is when did Cooper jump. The flight crew reported oscillations between 8:10 and 8:12. At this point, they stated that "he must be doing something with the stairs". We have no documented record of when the pressure bump occurred. No time stamp, nothing. All we have are the statements of the pilots after the fact : "lights of the suburbs of Portland", "10 to 15 minutes after last contact".

As a result, the jump could have occurred anywhere between Orchards and the Columbia.

The fact that the money was found along the Columbia upstream from where the plane crossed over is in my mind a clue that he jumped near the Columbia.

Chaucer: Refresh me on how you get Orchards as the northern most jump point and not Battle Ground.  Also, are you saying there was no pressure bump, or that there were oscillations and a pressure bump, or that there was a pressure bump but we don't know the time?

The pressure bump conversation predates you by quite a bit, so it is not a new theory, I'm just wondering about it and figured it would be a good question.
I'm going by the time along the flight path.

8:05 was the  last time the flight crew hear from Cooper when he responded to them on the intercom that "everything was OK"

8:10 was the first time there are any reports of "oscillations" (FBI Vault, Part 41, p. 31 & 32)

8:12 was the last time there are any reports of "oscillations".(FBI Vault, Part 41, p. 31 & 32)  At this point the plane was just east of LaCenter.

There is no official report of a "pressure bump" which is generally used as the point at which Cooper jumped causing the stairs to swing back up. We don't know when that took place, but we know it took place AFTER 8:12 because the oscillations preceded the pressure bump.

So, while we don't have an exact time of the pressure bump, we do have pilot statements. Rat said initially that the pressure bump was felt 5 to 10 minutes after last contact (8:05). That would put the bump between 8:10 and 8:15. We know it can't be between 8:10 and 8:12 because that is when the oscillations are happening. So it would have to happen between 8:13 and 8:15. However, Rat later told Carr that the pressure bump occurred 10 to 15 minutes after last contact (8:05). This would give you a range between 8:15 and 8:20 for the pressure bump.

However, further statements by the crew were that the pressure bump occurred when "the lights of the suburbs of Portland were visible" but they "had not yet crossed the Columbia. The plane crossed over the Columbia at 8:17, so we can eliminate any bump happening after 8:17.

Thus, the timing of the oscillations combined with the statements of the pilot give a range between 8:13 and 8:17 for Cooper jumping and causing the pressure bump. The median of this time range is 8:15. At 8:15 the plane is over the Orchards area.

In actuality, the northernmost jump point IS just north of Battleground and the southernmost would be the northern banks of the Columbia. I used Orchards as a center between the two.

My contention is that the jump occurred in the 8:16/8:17 time frame and Cooper and/or the money came to rest very near the banks of the Columbia.

Sorry that was so wordy. I'll be happy to clarify anything.


Hominid & Georger Telephone interviews with Andy Anderson: Tuesday Jan 28, 2014 –

Georger,
Thank you for entertaining my questions.

NWA documents indicate that, at approximately 8:11pm PST, an event occurred which was described by an NWA incident report as "oscillation of cabin rate of climb indicator."  The event occurred just after the flight was advised  of weather at Reno and "Reno looks better as time goes by" per a TTY based log.  This log (that appears to be an attempt by a non-aviation person to type all he thought he was hearing) also included "Must be doing something with air stairs" immediately after the "oscillations" report.
 
Oscillation of the cabin climb rate gauge seems reasonable.  It is conceivable that the oscillation could be just an indication that the airstair moving up and down was directly causing pressure cycles.  It is more likely that the pressure cycles resulted from the plane bobbing up and down a bit ("porpoising") as a result of the airstair functioning as an elevator as it moved up and down in the airstream.  It could have been that the hijacker was doing something like jumping up and down on the airstair to test its "feel" or to try to get the stair locked down.
 
It seems very unlikely that the "oscillation" and "doing something with air stairs" would be reference to a pressure pulse felt in ears, or the airstair-ajar enunciator light going out momentarily. 

Q1:  Andy, Who on the flight crew made the oscillation report?
 A:  Rataczak filed the report, based on my observations. But he did not report it immediately as we discussed it for some minutes then Bill (R) radioed it in to  NWA.

Q2:  Is it correct that the intent of the report from the crew was that the cabin climb rate guage indication had oscillated?
 A:  It was the "rate of descent" gauge that detected the so-called "pressure bump."  Two guages are used to detect the disruptions of airflow.  (1) the Differential Pressure/Cabin Altitude (which serves as a dual function guage); and (2) rate of climb, or, rate of descent guage.
If so:

Q3:  Approximately how many pressure (climb rate) cycles (up-downs) occurred?
 A:    Do not specifically recall, but it wasn’t a one time event but a series of fluctuations which attracted our attention.  I saw it first then alerted Scott and Bill, ending in a single pressure event we felt in our ears, and nothing following, not even more fluctuations. We waited to see if something more would happen but it didn’t.

   Q4:  Approximately what was the rate or time span per cycle?  (e.g., a second per cycle)
 A:  I just don’t recall. I would have to think about that and estimate it.

   Q5:  Was there a feeling of the plane bobbing up and down?  [Bill Rataczak has been quoted as saying something like: at some point there was a sudden pressure pulse felt in the ears, that the enunciator light went out momentarily, there was a "bump" of the airframe, and that he immediately told ATC that he thought the hijacker had "taken leave" of the plane.  All of this seems likely. Regarding the later test flight, it has been reported that someone on the flight confirmed that the pressure pulse that was felt (when a weighted sled was released) was the same as what occurred during the hijacking.]
A:  Q5.   Not really and it wasn’t exactly as you describe.  These were minor oscillations. We detected on the gauges only.  We just presumed pretty quickly that it was Cooper fiddling with the aft stairs but we weren’t one hundred percent sure because we were already flying dirty, with throttles up and fighting icing and weather.  A lot going on and it wasn’t totally smooth even before the oscillations started. What we noticed was the pattern of the oscillations was continuing and there was a very minor disruption of the slipstream. Scott said at first he wasn’t feeling anything for sure, then a little later he thought  there was more drag and the nose was deviating a little. When the final bump happened and the oscillations stopped that sealed it. But even then we weren’t sure and we waited before calling anybody.

Q6:  Was it you who confirmed that the pressure pulse of the test flight seemed the same as what was felt during the hijacked flight?
A:   Yes, I was the only original crew member on board the re-test.

Q7:  Which (if any) of the above characterizations attributed to Bill can you confirm?
A:   All. [broke for a minute for Andy to get some coffee].

Q8:  What can you recall about when the pressure pulse event occurred during the hijacking?  Was it at the end of the "oscillations"?  A few seconds after them?  A minute after? [One of the airforce guys (Msgt Saiz) who went out on the stair told me that he jumped up and down on the stair at some point to test how the plane would react.  Of course, he was able to experience how the stair responded, but not how the plane responded.  The other two still-living airforce people have no memory of this.]
A:    I monitored the gauges and reported to Captain Scott.  We all agreed that the gauges were detecting a disruption of airflow, most likely caused by Cooper testing out the aft stairs.   But we all felt one physically distinguishable "bump" with our ears which came abruptly after we had been monitoring the gauges. We all felt it almost in unison, surprised, "there he goes!"  It was the largest bump by far, an abrupt pressure change.  We all thought he had exited the aircraft at that point, because the gauges never detected any further major airflow disruptions after that ‘thud’. The re-test duplicated the oscillations and the pressure bump exactly.
 
Q9:  Were you aware of one of the stair-walkers jumping up and down on the stair?  Did you experience the plane's reaction?  If so, what was it? [Among multiple sources from NWA, there are references to the "oscillations" event.  But there are absolutely no references to a pressure pulse, the enunciator light going out, or "took leave of us."  After the "oscillations" event was logged by teletype at 8:12 and seconds, the next teletype-logged communication (sent at 8:20 and seconds) was:
   305  CALLED
   MSP FLT OPNS   GO TO 131.8
   SEADD  HE IS ALREADY ON THAT FREQ
   MSP  R.  WE [are] ON [t]HE PHONE WND [and] WILL BE TAL[k]ING TO HIM SHORTLY
   SEADD  R.
This is the last TTY logged communication we have.  There was an 8-minute absence of communications in the TTY log preceding it.  The 131.8 frequency was set up (with ARINC?) about the time the flight was taking off from SEATAC, with a notation "after company"  (frequency).]:
A:  Don't recall specifically.  I believe it was only registered on the pressure and descent gauges. I don’t know anything about teletype matters or who did what to keep track at NWA?

Q10:  Did the flight crew report the pressure pulse immediately after it happened?  If so, over what comm circuit?
A:  That’s a good question because we may have reported the oscillations/pressure changes once, but we were busy and didn’t report it multiple times. We weren’t sure what was going on. When the final bump happened, which we detected with our ears, we were surprised, and we didn’t report it right away.  Rataczak finally reported the bump via radio.

Q11:  Why do you think a frequency was set up for use after the "company" frequency? [I've been unable to get a manual for the NWA 727s of the period, but have info from 3 other airlines.  From this it seems that the procedure that was provided by Boeing to the flight crew for allowing the hijacker out via the aft airstair would have included disabling the hydraulic power to the airstair (probably by pulling the circuit breaker in the cockpit) so that the hijacker wouldn't be able to power the stair to the full-down position (and lock it there).
 A:  I don’t recall the specifics of this. Our cockpit was in communication with NWA and ATC.   Not FBI.

Q12:  Did the procedure include disabling the airstair hydraulic power?
A:    We didn't want to disable the airstairs by defusing electrical power to hydraulic actuators.  We wanted the bastard to get off our ship ASAP.

Q13:  Did Paul Soderlind sit in the copilot seat during the test flight?
A:   Yes, I believe that's correct.

Q14:  Who was the NWA instrumentation man who stood behind the rest of the group in the pic?
A:   Do not recall.

Q15:  Who was the FBI agent standing beside you in the test group photo?   (holding the manila envelope and apparently a jacket in addition to the raincoat he was wearing)
 A: Do not recall. 

Q16:  Who was the heavier agent kneeling down in front of you two, in dark clothes?
 A:  Too long ago, can't recall.

Q17:  Who was on the test flight other than the 12 people in the group pic?
A:   Don't specifically recall.  Maybe some other Air Force people.  Yes, a couple I think.

Q18:  Is there anything else you consider significant to the question of where the hijacker jumped?
A:  It was very dark, with virtually no ground reference except when we got in the Portland area.  We bounced around the clouds, with occasional breaks. The 727’s  slipstream initially overcame the aft stairs hydraulic system.  The stairs weren’t opening like Cooper needed. Cooper called me on the interphone while Tina was riding up front with us. Cooper had let Tina come to the front.  He yelled,  "slow it down!."  I stated back to Cooper, "OK."  And we did;  we slowed the plane. The oscillations continued, as I remember, but were smoother and we hadn’t heard anything from Cooper.  Bill called back to him and he finally answered.  He said everything was “OK”. More time passed. And then suddenly came that “bump”. After the final "bump" which we felt with our ears, we all discussed it for awhile, waiting for another bump.  It never repeated, so we assumed that was his exit.  But we discussed this among ourselves before notifying NWA.  The truth is, we just didn't know for sure.  I just don't recall how much time lapsed between feeling the final "bump" and reporting it to NWA via radio.  That’s where the uncertainty has come from. 
But later we all thought that final bump was his exit. 

[end of Part I interview]
« Last Edit: December 15, 2020, 01:42:32 PM by georger »
 
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Offline Chaucer

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Re: Flight Path And Related Issues
« Reply #3817 on: December 15, 2020, 01:41:58 PM »
Thanks for finally posting this, Georger. I think this is important evidence regarding the oscillations/pressure bump discussion.
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Offline Shutter

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Re: Flight Path And Related Issues
« Reply #3818 on: December 15, 2020, 04:37:21 PM »
Enough of the bickering...posts removed..
 
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Offline Chaucer

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Re: Flight Path And Related Issues
« Reply #3819 on: December 16, 2020, 05:18:10 PM »
This is a newbie question, and one that I have searched for on here, but can't find:

When Cooper lowered the after stairs in flight, did the stairs lock into a down position? Or were they possibly bouncing around freely?
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Offline Shutter

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Re: Flight Path And Related Issues
« Reply #3820 on: December 16, 2020, 05:27:15 PM »
The stairs only drop about 20 degree's due to the wind..I'm going to ask McNally what they looked like before stepping on them. I believe he had them drop the stairs..
 
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Offline Dfs346

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Re: Flight Path And Related Issues
« Reply #3821 on: December 16, 2020, 05:32:47 PM »
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I'm going to ask McNally what they looked like before stepping on them.

May I ask who is McNally?
 

Offline Shutter

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Re: Flight Path And Related Issues
« Reply #3822 on: December 16, 2020, 05:35:29 PM »
Copycat hijacker...June 23, 1972
« Last Edit: December 16, 2020, 05:36:30 PM by Shutter »
 

Offline Shutter

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Re: Flight Path And Related Issues
« Reply #3823 on: December 16, 2020, 05:41:59 PM »
Martin McNally, been in prison since 1972 and released in 2010.
 

Offline Chaucer

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Re: Flight Path And Related Issues
« Reply #3824 on: December 16, 2020, 06:08:22 PM »
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The stairs only drop about 20 degree's due to the wind..I'm going to ask McNally what they looked like before stepping on them. I believe he had them drop the stairs..
So, I would assume that with each step, the stairs lowered by a few degrees until fully deployed with Cooper on the bottom step.

I wonder what the movement of the stairs would have been with Cooper on them. Would they be fairly stationary and stable? Or would he be holding on and trying to keep his balance as with each step?
“Completely unhinged”