Flight data and cockpit voice recorders on the Jeju Air jet that crashed on Dec. 29, killing 179 people, stopped recording ...
Flight data and cockpit voice recorders on the Jeju Air jet that crashed on Dec. 29, killing 179 people, stopped recording ...
The mystery surrounding the origin of the fatal plane catastrophe in South Korea last month is further complicated by the ...
After analyzing the devices, the U.S. National Transportation Safety Board concluded​ that both the flight data and cockpit ...
Black boxes can be damaged by impact, fire or prolonged exposure to deep water. But it is hard to explain how the Jeju Air ...
Black boxes, crucial for uncovering flight mysteries, are high-visibility orange devices designed to preserve cockpit sounds and data. Invented by David Warren in the 1950s, their technology has ...
They are not actually black but high-visibility orange. Experts disagree how the nickname originated but it has become synonymous with the quest for answers when planes crash. Many historians ...
South Korea's transport ministry announced that the black boxes retrieved from the wreckage of the doomed Jeju Air jet are ...
A former transport ministry accident investigator said the discovery suggests all power, including backup, may have been cut, which is rare.
The absence of a transcript of the final moments leaves the investigation without crucial clues that would likely have shed ...
Flight recorders from the passenger jet that crashed in South Korea last month, killing more than 170 people, stopped working minutes before the plane belly-landed and exploded on the runway, ...