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  1. Richard Godfrey is a blogger who explores the disappearance of MH370 using WSPR (Weak Signal Propagation Reporter) data. He also covers other aviation mysteries, such as QTR901 and N45VX, and shares his insights on MH370 theories and clues.

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  2. Richard Godfrey is a computer scientist and avionic engineer who designed and operated systems for various aircraft and space missions. He is the lead of the MH370 Independent Group, a team of volunteers who investigate the disappearance of MH370 since 2014.

  3. Dec 13, 2022 · A new report published by British engineer Richard Godfrey and American MH370 wreckage hunter Blaine Gibson, claims the piece of debris most likely penetrated from the inside by the jet's disintegrating engines. Tuesday 13 December 2022 19:24, UK. Blaine Gibson and finders of the debris. Pics: Richard Godfrey and Blaine Gibson.

  4. Dec 3, 2021 · Richard Godfrey hopes to "filter out the needle in the haystack". The exact point determined by data calculations is around 33 degrees south and 95 degrees east in the Indian Ocean. There have...

  5. May 5, 2024 · Richard Godfrey is a contributor to The Search for MH370, a website that covers the mystery of the missing Malaysia Airlines flight. He writes about radar data, flight paths, WSPR signals and other topics related to the MH370 investigation.

  6. Dec 6, 2021 · Richard Godfrey, 71, believes he has located the doomed jet’s exact resting place – on the sea bed some 1,200 miles west of Perth, Western Australia. He also has a theory as to how it ended up...

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  8. Mar 8, 2024 · A decade after the Malaysian Airlines plane went missing, are we any closer to finding it? Amateur investigators are convinced they know its location.

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