Indonesia says flight data recorder of plane still missing
Indonesia's Search and Rescue Agency said Wednesday that rescuers are still searching for one of the two "black boxes" from a passenger plane that crashed into a mountain over the weekend, killing all 54 people on board.
Agency chief Henry Bambang Soelistyo said people who reached the crash site on Tuesday had retrieved the cockpit voice recorder, but not the flight data recorder.
Soelistyo earlier said both black boxes had been recovered. But on Wednesday he said officials had misinterpreted reports from rescuers at the scene.
The cockpit voice recorder captures the pilots' conversations and any other noises in the cockpit, while the flight data recorder holds key details about the plane's speed, altitude, direction and the pilots' actions during the flight.
The ATR42-300 twin turboprop plane crashed Sunday into a mountain while on a scheduled 42-minute flight from Jayapura to Oksibil in Papua province.
Heavy fog and bad weather have prevented the evacuation of bodies from the crash site by helicopter. Rescuers have had to take them on foot, walking through the rugged jungle for five hours to Oksibil. So far 27 bodies have been evacuated.
Source:
AP
Agency chief Henry Bambang Soelistyo said people who reached the crash site on Tuesday had retrieved the cockpit voice recorder, but not the flight data recorder.
Soelistyo earlier said both black boxes had been recovered. But on Wednesday he said officials had misinterpreted reports from rescuers at the scene.
The cockpit voice recorder captures the pilots' conversations and any other noises in the cockpit, while the flight data recorder holds key details about the plane's speed, altitude, direction and the pilots' actions during the flight.
The ATR42-300 twin turboprop plane crashed Sunday into a mountain while on a scheduled 42-minute flight from Jayapura to Oksibil in Papua province.
Heavy fog and bad weather have prevented the evacuation of bodies from the crash site by helicopter. Rescuers have had to take them on foot, walking through the rugged jungle for five hours to Oksibil. So far 27 bodies have been evacuated.
Source:
AP
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