This Is Still Our Best Theory For MH370

Fifteen months later, we have no idea know what happened to Malaysia Airlines Flight 370. But we keep going back to a theory posited by a pilot Chris Goodfellow just days after March 2014 disappearance. Goodfellow thinks an electrical fire in the cockpit could have caused the loss of transponders and communications in the aircraft. […]
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Fifteen months later, we have no idea know what happened to Malaysia Airlines Flight 370. But we keep going back to a theory posited by a pilot Chris Goodfellow just days after March 2014 disappearance.

Goodfellow thinks an electrical fire in the cockpit could have caused the loss of transponders and communications in the aircraft. The flight crew would have turned west toward a nearby airfield before being overcome by smoke, leaving the autopilot to fly until the plane ran out of fuel and crashed, somewhere over the ocean.

A newly found piece of wreckage that may match the missing 777 could support Goodfellow's idea, still the best theory we've got.

Read the full story: A Startlingly Simple Theory About the Missing Malaysia Airlines Jet