Friday, 2 August 2019

Two United Airlines "Flight 175" Taking-off From Boston Logan Airport On 9/11: CONFIRMED

By Mark Conlon


In the Bureau of Transportation Statistics (BTS) database reveals a strange discrepancy regarding the "wheels-off time" of Flight 175. This is the moment when the plane lifts off from the runway. The BTS notes a wheels-off time of 8:23 a.m., which differs distinctly from the "official" wheels-off time, which is 8:14 a.m. http://www.bts.gov/xml/ontimesummarystatistics/src/dstat/OntimeSummaryDepatures.xml


This 8:14 a.m. take-off is confirmed by the Air Traffic Control (ATC) pilot radio transcript and various radar data. So, what about the 8:23 a.m.? How was this data generated?

The wheels-off time of is triggered automatically by a mechanical switcher when the plane loses contact to the ground. The data is sent automatically to the airline via Aircraft Communication Addressing Radio System (ACARS), and the airline forwards them to the BTS on a regular base. So no human failure is possible. The fact that the gate departure 7:58 a.m. coincides with the official story suggests that the data is valid.

Being familiar with the duplication of Flight 11 at Logan Airport, I arrived at the conclusion that this was another case of a duplicated plane, with "Flight 175" taking-off at 8:14 a.m. and another "Flight 175" taking off at 8:23 a.m. http://pilotsfor911truth.org/forum//index.php?showtopic=29

To support the 8:23 a.m. take-off time of the duplicate Flight 175, I identified a surprising  eyewitness, who is named Steven Miller who is a pilot of US Airways, and was next in line behind Flight 175 to take-off from the runway on 9/11.

On the taxi-out in Boston, Steven Miller (the pilots of US Airways 6805) waited at the runway's hold-short line, where Miller looked up to watch a United Boeing 767 take-off, (United Flight 175). The final weight and balance calculations from dispatch came over the ACARS at 8:05 a.m., and with that in hand, the crew was ready to fly. Wide-body aircraft produce especially powerful wingtip vortices - horizontal, tornado-like winds off the ends of the wings - which require time to dissipate before another aircraft can take-off, so Miller waited the required three minutes after United Flight 175 departed before he received his take-off clearance.
Source: (Lynn Spencer, "Touching History", p. 58)

A quick check with the BTS database reveals that USA 6805 had a wheels-off time of 8:28 a.m. Miller explicitly describes that he waited 3 minutes before getting take-off clearance; adding a little bit for the timespan between take-off clearance and actual wheels-off, Flight 175 must have lifted off the runway around 8:23-8:24 a.m. It is out of the question that Miller observed a plane that took-off at 8:14 a.m.

The question has to asked; Did Miller see a different United plane? This is very unlikely. Searching the BTS database for other United Boeing 767's delivers no results for the relevant time. There is a very slim possibility that a non-domestic United Boeing 767 took-off just then, because the BTS database lists only domestic flights. However, Miller himself says it was Flight 175, so either he overheard the flight number when taxiing out, or, as someone who was frequently flying from Logan (as he says) he was familiar with the wide-body planes departing at that time.

The BTS database also reveals that the tail number of the plane that took-off at 8:23 a.m. was N612UA. This was United Airlines Flight 175. And there is no proof that the plane that took-off at 8:14 a.m. was N612UA.

Thanks for reading & caring!


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