‘I’m a plane engineer and this is exactly why we will never find the missing MH370’

by dharm
March 10, 2026 · 6:32 AM
'I'm a plane engineer and this is exactly why we will never find the missing MH370'


EgyptAir engineer Ismail Hammad believes missing Malaysia Airlines flight MH370 crashed in Philippine islands as Ocean Infinity suspends search

An aviation expert and engineer explained exactly why they believe we will never find the missing MH370 plane which into thin air on March 8, 2014.

All 227 passengers and 12 crew disappeared along with the Boeing 777 plane following its take-off from Kuala Lumpur to Beijing. The last communication crew had with air traffic control was 38 minutes into the flight.

It was tracked my military radar for another hour after its final communication and had deviated from its planned flight path,

After leaving radar range 230 miles away from Penang Island in Malaysia, MH370 was not seen or heard from again.

Ismail Hammad, chief engineer at Egypt Air, told the Mirror his theory “is not a guesswork but it is an engineering inevitability if we follow the aviation fundamentals.”

Hammad believes the problem the search operation has is it is relying on the wrong information.

He explained said: “The good technical condition of the aircraft wreckage which might result from a ditching on relatively calm water, along with the ocean currents in the Indian Ocean basin off the west coast of Australia, and the deviation value of the aircraft’s magnetic compass.

“All of that make the presence of the aircraft around these corridors and water strips highly probable.

“And that is not a guesswork, but it is an engineering inevitability if we follow the aviation fundamentals. Relying solely on the signals of the Inmarsat satellite has left the investigators confused for a decade.”

The latest search attempts by marine robotics firm Ocean Infinity restarted in December after it was paused due to seasonal conditions the previous spring.

The infamous Malaysia Airlines Boeing 777, carrying 227 passengers and 12 crew members disappeared on March 8, 2014, whilst travelling from Kuala Lumpur to Beijing, remains at the centre of aviation history’s greatest mysteries and represents the deadliest single incident involving a missing aircraft.

In searches over the years scraps were found on the eastern coast of Africa. Hammad said these parts “have no signs of damage which indicate the crashing of the fuselage with the turbulent surface of the ocean water and the subsequent explosion of the aircraft due to saturating its tanks with fuel vapor.”

He added: “ We cannot find on these pieces the damages of dents, sooty appearance or dark discoloration due to the explosion of the tanks. that suggested a smooth ditching in a relatively shallow and calm water surface.”

Hammad takes issue with the search resuming again off the coast of Perth. He said this fails to take into account the deviation between the magnetic north of the magnetic compass of the aircraft and the true north of the earth.

Hammad believes he has the solution to save everyone “money and time” and ultimately discover the aircraft that has caused immense distress to authorities and bereaved families.

He also recommends looking in the “maze of the Philippine archipelago, which consists of 7,641 islands.”

He explained the autopilot computer proves tricky to programme using merely spatial coordinates.

He added: “Likewise, a pilot alone would not be able to continue flying a big aircraft like B777-200 for 9 hours since take off till vanishing, including the 3 hours on average it takes to check the condition of the aircraft and its documentations before the taking off according to the aviation regulations.”

Ismail determined that without autopilot systems or navigational equipment, relying solely on the aircraft’s magnetic compass would mean focusing the search zone between the Malacca Strait and Perth coastline given “all those stresses”.

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