The Fiji Times

Indonesia recovers cockpit voice recorder of crashed Sriwijaya Air jet

- Indonesian Transporta­tion Minister Budi Karya Sumadi (left) greets chairman of National Transporta­tion Safety Committee Soerjanto Tjahjono as a box containing the cockpit voice recorder of Sriwijaya Air flight SJ-182 retrieved from the waters off Java Isl

JAKARTA –– Indonesia has recovered the cockpit voice recorder from a Sriwijaya Air jet that crashed into the Java Sea in January, and the air accident investigat­or said on Wednesday it could take up to a week to be able to listen to the recording.

The CVR could help investigat­ors understand the actions taken by the pilots of the doomed jet, which crashed shortly after take-off on January 9, killing all 62 people on board.

A preliminar­y report by investigat­ors released in February said the plane had an imbalance in engine thrust that eventually led it into a sharp roll and then a final dive into the sea. The report included informatio­n from the flight data recorder (FDR).

Divers found the casing and beacon of the CVR from the 26-year-old Boeing Co 737-500 within days of the crash but had been searching for the memory unit in relatively shallow but muddy waters, where currents are sometimes strong.

The CVR of flight SJ182 was located late on Tuesday, Indonesia’s transport minister told a news conference.

It was found in mud sucked up by a dredging ship and is being dried out and cleaned of mud and salt because it has been at sea for a long time, Indonesia National Transporta­tion Safety Committee (KNKT) investigat­or Nurcahyo Utomo said.

He said the memory unit had not been damaged by the impact.

“We will take CVR to lab for reading, about three days to one week,” KNKT head Soerjanto Tjahjono said.

“After that we’ll transcribe and match it to FDR. Without a CVR, in the Sriwijaya 182 case it would be very difficult to determine the cause.”

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