Log In


Reset Password
  • MENU
    National
    Friday, April 19, 2024

    App goes viral as Ukraine crash spawns planespotters

    Toulouse, France - The downing of Malaysia Air Flight 17 over Ukraine has thrust a plane-tracking application into the limelight as more people study global flight paths that previously only drew aviation enthusiasts and professionals.

    The Flightradar24 app, which comes for free or as a paid service with more content, tops the charts of Apple's app store in Britain, Germany and the Netherlands, the country that lost the most people in the crash. A 50-fold traffic increase to the company's website has choked server capacity, forcing it to restrain some services to increase bandwidth.

    "We've had several surges in app sales since the Iceland ash cloud, but this is by far the biggest," said Frederik Lindahl, the 37 year-old Flightradar24 chief executive officer, who runs the company out of Stockholm.

    The growing fascination with flightpaths stems in part from the dearth of reliable information surrounding the crash, caused most likely by a missile strike over eastern Ukraine. Flightradar24 data show that while the airspace was deemed safe by authorities at Flight 17's cruising altitude, some airlines had avoided traversing the region even before it was closed following the incident, while other planes were in close pursuit of the Malaysian Boeing Co. 777, which was carrying 298 people.

    Flightradar24's data reveals that the airspace over Ukraine was a popular route before the downing, with MH17 having flown the same path five days in the prior week. In that time, some 820 flights traversed eastern Ukraine, with two - flown by Singapore Airlines and Air India within 16 miles of the Malaysian jet when it was blown up.

    With the air space over eastern Ukraine now closed, the app shows a string of aircraft snaking through Turkey and Russian territory adjacent to Ukraine on their path between Europe, the Middle East and Asia.

    Lindahl and his staff that comprises 12 people in Stockholm compile the flightpaths using data gleaned from automatic dependent surveillance-broadcast technology, which picks up an aircraft location. The company relies on a network of more than 4,000 receivers, a contraption the shape a small box that can be positioned on an house roof to transmit data.

    Flightradar24 has shipped several ADS-B sets as far as Greenland and is scouring uncovered spots around the globe, including Ilha Fernando de Noronha, a tiny island on the coast of Brazil. Lindahl said his company sends out about 50 receivers each week, at a total cost per shipment of $700.

    Comment threads are monitored for 48 hours after publication and then closed.