The National - News

BLACK BOXES IN FOCUS AS ETHIOPIAN AIRLINES DISASTER IS INVESTIGAT­ED

- Deena Kamel

The Federal Aviation Authority, the US aviation regulator, backtracke­d on its earlier position and grounded Boeing’s best-selling 737 Max jets after evidence showing the Ethiopian Airlines flight that crashed on Sunday may have experience­d the same problem as Lion Air’s aircraft that plunged into the Java Sea five months ago.

US air safety investigat­ors held intense discussion­s with their Ethiopian peers on where the black-box recorders from Ethiopian Airlines flight ET 302 will be downloaded and privately pushed to have the devices sent instead to the National Transporta­tion Safety Board’s facilities.

This was after Ethiopia indicated it wanted to send the flight-data and cockpit-voice recorders overseas and preferred the UK’s Air Accidents Investigat­ion Branch as an objective outsider, The Wall

Street Journal reported. Ethiopian authoritie­s, eager to demonstrat­e that US experts will not have undue influence over the investigat­ion or its conclusion­s, decided to send the devices to France for inspection. The incident raises questions about how investigat­ions are handled in the aftermath of plane crashes.

Q What happens after a plane crash?

A The bodies are recovered, identified and taken away from the aircraft crash site, as investigat­ors recover and account for all aircraft parts. During this phase, the Digital Flight Data Recorder or DFDR, the Digital Cockpit Voice Recorder and air traffic control tapes are recovered and marked as evidence by the crash investigat­ion team. The recovered wreckage is then examined to recreate the last moments before the crash and identify factors that led to the incident.

Who analyses the black box contents and where?

In many cases the data from the devices is downloaded by the local regulator and airline then immediatel­y sent for data analysis which helps determine the last crucial minutes of the aircraft’s flight patterns. The parties involved often include the airline, aviation regulator in the carrier’s country of origin, regulator of country where the jet crashed and a technical team dispatched by the aircraft manufactur­er. Computer software downloads the data, helps to recreate a simulation of the last pre-crash moments and assimilate­s readings from the flight instrument­s, said Mark Martin, head of Martin Consulting.

What is the black box and what informatio­n does it contain?

It is a data recorder that has evolved from a needle recording on a wax rotating plate to today’s device that looks similar to a computer hard drive installed into a metal box that is resistant to fire, heat, water, pressure and shock. It records all critical parameters that are needed to analyse flight patterns: speed, altitude, engine performanc­e, direction, velocity, position of flaps, landing gear, cabin pressure, temperatur­e of cabin and cargo, fuel quantity, GPS position, cockpit alerts and audio recordings.

How long does it take investigat­ors to produce a report?

It may take several days to complete the first readings of the black boxes recovered from the Ethiopian Airlines jet, a spokesman for the French air accident investigat­ion agency conducting the analysis said on Thursday. In general, it may take anywhere from weeks to up to a year or two to produce an investigat­ion report.

What should victims’ families expect in the coming weeks or year?

Any data extracted and analysed will depend on the extent of damage to the black boxes. Depending on the case, some airlines offer compensati­on to the families following air disasters and try to return human remains and personal belongings.

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