The Maui News

Indonesian searchers hunt for crashed plane’s voice recorder

- By NINIEK KARMINI ACHMAD IBRAHIM

JAKARTA, Indonesia — Divers looking for a crashed plane’s cockpit voice recorder were searching in mud and plane debris on the seabed between Indonesian islands today to retrieve informatio­n key to learning why the Sriwijaya Air jet nosedived into the water over the weekend.

Indonesian navy divers Tuesday recovered the flight data recorder from the jet that disappeare­d Saturday minutes after taking off from Jakarta with 62 people aboard. The in- formation on both black boxes will be key to the crash investigat­ion.

The 26-year-old Boeing 737-500 had resumed commercial flights last month after almost nine months out of service because of flight cutbacks caused by the coronaviru­s pandemic.

The U.S. Federal Aviation Administra­tion sent an airworthin­ess directive requiring operators of various Boeing 737 aircraft models, including the 737-500, to carry out engine checks before they can be flown again after being out of service. The order followed reports of engines shutting down in mid-flight because of corrosion in a key valve.

Director General of Air Transporta­tion Novie Riyanto said the plane was inspected on Dec. 2, including checks for engine corrosion, and was declared airworthy by Indonesia’s Transporta­tion Ministry on Dec. 14. It resumed commercial flights on Dec. 22, according to ministry data. After returning to service, the plane made 132 flights, including the last one, according to aviationda­ta firm Flightrada­r24.

Aviation experts said planes that are parked for long stretches can be returned to flight safely.

“It depends on how the airline maintains the aircraft while it is grounded,” said William Waldock, an aviationsa­fety expert at Embry-Riddle Aeronautic­al University in

Prescott, Ariz. He said airlines should run engines periodical­ly and perform other maintenanc­e. “It tends to keep everything lubricated, and it reduces the likelihood of corrosion building up in places you don’t want it to be.”

John Goglia, a former member of the U.S. National Transporta­tion Safety Board, said preparing a long-grounded jet can be an intensive and expensive chore, taking a team of mechanics up to two weeks to check engines and make sure that electronic, hydraulic and fuel systems are operating and free of contaminat­ion.

“My initial thought” on learning about the plane’s long grounding, “was if they did the proper due diligence,” Goglia said, “because sometimes that stuff doesn’t show up for a little while.”

Navy officials have said the two black boxes were buried in seabed mud under tons of sharp objects in the plane’s wreckage, slowing the search efforts. A signal that may be from the cockpit voice recorder was detected near where the flight data recorder was recovered, between Lancang and Laki islands in the Thousand Island chain just north of Jakarta.

At least 160 divers were deployed today to boost the search for the recorder that holds conversati­ons between pilots.

More than 3,600 rescue personnel, 13 helicopter­s, 54 ships and 20 raft boats are searching in the area where the jet crashed and have found parts of the plane and human remains.

So far, the searchers have sent nearly 90 body bags containing human remains to police identifica­tion experts and anguished family members have been providing samples for DNA tests to the disaster victim identifica­tion unit who said Tuesday they had identified four victims.

The U.S. National Transporta­tion Safety Board said today the team it is sending to join the crash investigat­ion will arrive in a few days.

The four NTSB investigat­ors will be joined by personnel from the U.S. Federal Aviation Administra­tion, General Electric and Boeing, who have expertise in operations, human performanc­e, airplane structure and systems, the NTSB wrote on Twitter.

Indonesia’s aviation industry grew quickly after the nation’s economy was opened following the fall of dictator Suharto in the late 1990s. Safety concerns led the United States and European Union to ban Indonesian carriers for years, both since lifted due to better compliance with internatio­nal aviation standards.

 ?? AP photo ?? Members of National Transporta­tion Safety Committee place into a container the flight data recorder box of Sriwijaya Air flight SJ-182 retrieved from the Java Sea on Tuesday, where the passenger jet crashed.
AP photo Members of National Transporta­tion Safety Committee place into a container the flight data recorder box of Sriwijaya Air flight SJ-182 retrieved from the Java Sea on Tuesday, where the passenger jet crashed.

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