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“Little Gray Dot” In New Video Uncovers Fatal Clue In Air India Crash That Ended 270 Lives
Air India plane in flight with landing gear down captured in new enhanced clip before crash accident investigation.
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“Little Gray Dot” In New Video Uncovers Fatal Clue In Air India Crash That Ended 270 Lives

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A chilling new video appeared to show the “total game-changer” moment that led to the horrifying Air India crash in Gujarat, India.

Just seconds after takeoff, it was already too late for the doomed flight AI171, which crashed into an accommodation building for medical students.

The Boeing 787 exploded and ended the lives of 241 people on board and at least 29 on the ground.

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    Highlights
    • A new HD video may reveal the moment that led to the deadly Air India crash.
    • Veteran pilot Steve Schreiber pointed towards a crucial emergency system deploying mid-air.
    • He said the “little gray dot” in the video could the visual evidence.
    • Passenger Vishwash Kumar Ramesh was the only survivor to walk away from the massive wreckage.

    A new high-definition video may reveal the moment that led to the deadly Air India crash

    Image credits: Captain Steeeve

    As investigators attempt to determine the reason behind the devastating crash, veteran commercial airline pilot Steve Schreiber explained the possible cause after reviewing an HD-quality clip.

    According to the aviation expert, the footage contains a seemingly minor detail that cannot be ignored. And that detail is a small grey dot beneath the aircraft’s right wing.

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    Veteran pilot Steve Schreiber, known as “Captain Steeeve,” says the video shows a crucial emergency system deploying mid-air

    Image credits: Captain Steeeve

    Steve, known as Captain Steeeve on YouTube, said he believes the grey dot is a visual clue that the plane’s Ram Air Turbine (RAT) was deployed mid-air.

    RAT is a last-resort emergency system designed to kick in only when a plane loses all engine power or suffers a complete electrical or hydraulic failure.

    “Many airplanes have it,” explained the 63-year-old pilot in a YouTube video. “It is just behind the wing on the right side of the airplane, there is a little door that holds it in, and it looks like a little Evinrude motor, it’s a little two-bladed prop.”

    Image credits: aviationbrk

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    In the case of the London Gatwick-bound Air India flight, its deployment likely signals a catastrophic dual engine failure, which is a rare and catastrophic scenario that may have sealed the aircraft’s fate within seconds of takeoff.

    He said the “little gray dot” in the video could be a sign of the RAT having been deployed.

    “That little grey dot is the RAT. The protrusion is the door that opened to allow the RAT to come down,” he added.

    Steve believes the Ram Air Turbine (RAT)—a last-resort emergency power device—was activated just seconds after takeoff

    Image credits: aviationbrk

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    Moreover, Steve said there is a particular sound heard in the video that may also be evidence of the RAT being deployed.

    “A RAT makes a distinctive sound, it sounds like a propeller airplane going by, or a really high-pitched squeal,” he said. “It is basically spinning at the speed of sound to produce the energy, electrical and hydraulic, that it needs.”

    The expert pointed to a “little grey dot” under the wing in the footage as visual evidence of the RAT

    “If you weren’t looking at it, it sounded like a single-engine prop airplane just flew by,” he added.

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    He said the RAT was “originally designed as the absolute last resort, assuming there is going to be a dual engine failure at altitude” and was not “designed for an aeroplane at 400- 500ft.”

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    “But it is evidence for us,” he added.

    Captain Sumeet Sabharwal and co-pilot Clive Kundar gave a Mayday call almost immediately after the plane left the ground

    Image credits: OfficialJoel4_

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    The seasoned pilot, with nearly three decades of flying experience, believes the evidence points towards the Air India flight suffering dual engine failure.

    “It is evidence for us it was dual engine failure, most likely. It could have been an electrical issue, it could have been a hydraulic issue, it could have been either one of those,” he said in his YouTube video.

    Image credits: iAtulKrishan1

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    “But I think the fact that the airplane is mushing out of the sky gives the idea it was a dual engine failure.”

    To further support his theory, Steve pointed towards the account given by passenger Vishwash Kumar Ramesh, who was the only survivor to (literally) walk away from the massive wreckage still alive.

    Passenger Vishwash Kumar Ramesh was the only survivor to walk away from the massive wreckage

    Image credits: DD India

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    “Everything happened in seconds. I realized we were going down,” the 40-year-old survivor said last week.

    “Suddenly, the lights started flickering – green and white – then the plane rammed into some establishment that was there,” he continued.

    Image credits: Saurabh Sirohiya/NurPhoto/Getty Images

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    Steve said Vishwash’s account of the final moments onboard pointed towards dual engine failure before the explosion.

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    “He said just prior to the crash, he heard a loud bang and the lights flickered on the inside of the airplane. We have got a guy saying he heard a loud bang and the lights flickered, what would cause that? The deployment of the RAT,” the expert said.

    Despite his analysis, Steve said he is open to further updates as the investigation continues

    “It’s going to take over electrical and hydraulic, and as it does, the lights in the airplane would flicker,” he added.

    Steve also said it was hard to believe that “both engines on a 787 would flame out at the same time.”

    Although he was confident about the possibility of a dual engine failure, the top aviation analyst said he’s leaving the door “wide open” for further updates on what caused the crash.

    “Losing the effective use of both engines immediately after take off is amongst the rarest of rare occurrences,” one person commented online

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    Poll Question

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    Binitha Jacob

    Binitha Jacob

    Writer, Entertainment News Writer

    Read more »

    At Bored Panda, I dive into breaking celebrity news, Hollywood updates, and viral pop culture stories that spark global conversations. My background as a reporter at International Business Times and Latin Times gave me experience covering fast-moving entertainment stories for international audiences. Today, my work regularly appears on Google News, AOL, and MSN, reaching millions of readers. What excites me most is capturing the pop culture moments that people can’t stop talking about.

    Read less »
    Binitha Jacob

    Binitha Jacob

    Writer, Entertainment News Writer

    At Bored Panda, I dive into breaking celebrity news, Hollywood updates, and viral pop culture stories that spark global conversations. My background as a reporter at International Business Times and Latin Times gave me experience covering fast-moving entertainment stories for international audiences. Today, my work regularly appears on Google News, AOL, and MSN, reaching millions of readers. What excites me most is capturing the pop culture moments that people can’t stop talking about.

    What do you think ?
    ॐBoyGanesh
    Community Member
    8 months ago (edited) Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    This Captain Steve guy ran to no less than 10 new sources in India, including the India today and Hindustan times papers, speculating with certainty that the pilot monitoring must’ve accidentally hit the flaps lever instead of the gear up. Meanwhile, legitimate pilots and commentators, such as mentor now, and especially mini crash, investigation, came out with YouTube videos, the day of showing that the RAT had been deployed and that it was highly likely, a hydraulic and/or engine failure. Now the schmuck is claiming he saw the “original“ video That was available to everybody on day one, but he just now saw it so he’s revising his idiocy from earlier. Nearly every new source has been quoting this guy with gross misinformation from day one, because he has touted himself as the absolute authority. Scrèw this media/attention whóre. Go check out Mentour Now, Mini Crash Investigation or Blancolirio. Actual pilots who were investigating without speculation, not creating speculation.

    ॐBoyGanesh
    Community Member
    8 months ago (edited) Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    BTW, legitimate social media pilots (literally dozens of them) find this guy as a washed up, attention-seeking sensationalist. It’s amazing he still flies. The entire news community in India is now trying to correct from his original and erroneous speculations. He has caused more pilot distrust than anyone, ever. Fùck his fake mea culpa.

    Load More Replies...
    Steve H
    Community Member
    8 months ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    So many armchair aviation experts. Just shut up and keep your worthless opinions to yourselves

    Robert T
    Community Member
    8 months ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    Both the FDR and CVR have now been recovered. Lets leave it to the actual experts shall we!

    Load More Comments
    ॐBoyGanesh
    Community Member
    8 months ago (edited) Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    This Captain Steve guy ran to no less than 10 new sources in India, including the India today and Hindustan times papers, speculating with certainty that the pilot monitoring must’ve accidentally hit the flaps lever instead of the gear up. Meanwhile, legitimate pilots and commentators, such as mentor now, and especially mini crash, investigation, came out with YouTube videos, the day of showing that the RAT had been deployed and that it was highly likely, a hydraulic and/or engine failure. Now the schmuck is claiming he saw the “original“ video That was available to everybody on day one, but he just now saw it so he’s revising his idiocy from earlier. Nearly every new source has been quoting this guy with gross misinformation from day one, because he has touted himself as the absolute authority. Scrèw this media/attention whóre. Go check out Mentour Now, Mini Crash Investigation or Blancolirio. Actual pilots who were investigating without speculation, not creating speculation.

    ॐBoyGanesh
    Community Member
    8 months ago (edited) Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    BTW, legitimate social media pilots (literally dozens of them) find this guy as a washed up, attention-seeking sensationalist. It’s amazing he still flies. The entire news community in India is now trying to correct from his original and erroneous speculations. He has caused more pilot distrust than anyone, ever. Fùck his fake mea culpa.

    Load More Replies...
    Steve H
    Community Member
    8 months ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    So many armchair aviation experts. Just shut up and keep your worthless opinions to yourselves

    Robert T
    Community Member
    8 months ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    Both the FDR and CVR have now been recovered. Lets leave it to the actual experts shall we!

    Load More Comments
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