Investigators glean flight data from black boxes
INVESTIGATORS have pulled data from the black boxes of an Air France jet which crashed in the Atlantic in 2009, boosting efforts to explain what caused the disaster and killed all 228 people on board.
France's BEA air crash investigation agency said yesterday it had managed to transfer all the information stored in devices hauled from the seabed two weeks ago, almost two years after the Airbus A330 vanished in an equatorial storm.
The transfer - carried out at the weekend and filmed in front of investigators from four countries and French judicial officials - is the most important breakthrough yet in efforts to find out what caused the mysterious crash.
The BEA brought forward its target date for publishing a new report on the crash by around six months and said it may be able to issue interim findings in the summer.
"The most interesting thing will be to find out what the crew were seeing and understanding and how they were reacting and managing their responses," said Paul Hayes, safety director of UK-based aviation consultancy Ascend Aviation.
Flight 447 from Rio de Janeiro to Paris vanished in the storm on June 1, 2009, triggering an international hunt for the wreckage and black boxes that might contain clues.
The recorders were hauled nearly 4 kilometers to the sea's surface in early May after a search operation costing US$50 million and shipped to Paris last week.
At first it was unclear whether the data would be readable.
The successful data transfer includes all information from the flight data recorder, which monitors aircraft systems, and a loop containing the last two hours of cockpit voice recordings.
The operation took place after the memory cards and chips containing the recordings were dried out in carefully controlled conditions at BEA labs just outside Paris. The data will now be analyzed in detail, the BEA said.
"This work will take several weeks, after which a further interim report will be written and then published during the summer," it said in a statement.
Investigators had earlier said any information gleaned from the black boxes would take months to process and that they did not expect to issue a report until early next year. Relatives of some of the 228 people killed have voiced hope that their two-year wait for an explanation may soon be over.
The next stage of the investigation is expected to focus on whether any systems were at fault, cross-checking with alerts sent out by the aircraft's automatic messaging system, and what information was available to the pilots before the disaster.
Two Lufthansa jets were in the same area half an hour before the Air France crash, the World Meteorological Organization said at the time of the accident, but are reported to have taken different routes.
France's BEA air crash investigation agency said yesterday it had managed to transfer all the information stored in devices hauled from the seabed two weeks ago, almost two years after the Airbus A330 vanished in an equatorial storm.
The transfer - carried out at the weekend and filmed in front of investigators from four countries and French judicial officials - is the most important breakthrough yet in efforts to find out what caused the mysterious crash.
The BEA brought forward its target date for publishing a new report on the crash by around six months and said it may be able to issue interim findings in the summer.
"The most interesting thing will be to find out what the crew were seeing and understanding and how they were reacting and managing their responses," said Paul Hayes, safety director of UK-based aviation consultancy Ascend Aviation.
Flight 447 from Rio de Janeiro to Paris vanished in the storm on June 1, 2009, triggering an international hunt for the wreckage and black boxes that might contain clues.
The recorders were hauled nearly 4 kilometers to the sea's surface in early May after a search operation costing US$50 million and shipped to Paris last week.
At first it was unclear whether the data would be readable.
The successful data transfer includes all information from the flight data recorder, which monitors aircraft systems, and a loop containing the last two hours of cockpit voice recordings.
The operation took place after the memory cards and chips containing the recordings were dried out in carefully controlled conditions at BEA labs just outside Paris. The data will now be analyzed in detail, the BEA said.
"This work will take several weeks, after which a further interim report will be written and then published during the summer," it said in a statement.
Investigators had earlier said any information gleaned from the black boxes would take months to process and that they did not expect to issue a report until early next year. Relatives of some of the 228 people killed have voiced hope that their two-year wait for an explanation may soon be over.
The next stage of the investigation is expected to focus on whether any systems were at fault, cross-checking with alerts sent out by the aircraft's automatic messaging system, and what information was available to the pilots before the disaster.
Two Lufthansa jets were in the same area half an hour before the Air France crash, the World Meteorological Organization said at the time of the accident, but are reported to have taken different routes.
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