Indian accidental plane in India (AAIB) is to decide whether flight data and cockpit air records are sent by the end of Thursday for decoding and analysis.
At least 270 people, most passengers, killed when Boeing Boeing in London 787-8 Dreamliner falls less than a minute after Ahmedabad Airport in Western India.
Some media outlets report that black boxes have been sent abroad, but clarified by the Ministry of Civil Aviation an endless decision done.
The ministry As AAIB will determine the location for analysis after a “appropriate assessment of technical, safety, and security reasons”.
The investigators have recovered two sets of enhanced airborne reclounds (Eafrs) – the “Black Boxes” – from Boeing 787 Places to crash.
These combined units, which records flight flight data and cockpit audio, found in 13 and 16 June. The aircraft model brings two such sets to help with full analysis.
Data retailers track high accuracy in position of gear and flap levers, catch settings, machine performance, fuel flow and activate fire.
The data of “black airplane boxes can be used to change the final instance of flying and determining the cause of the incident.
However some media outlets report that the Recorders damaged by fire fire That’s round the plane after crashing, which is hard to get the Indian data and that the government plans to send the US recorder.
Captain Kishore Cinta, a former Investigator in AAIB accident, told BBC a set of recorders to ship to the US “provided by the National Transportation Turgardation Board (NTSB)”.
He said that even the new AAIB Lab In Delhi was taken in April, “it is unclear if it fully surpasses for data data data”.
Meanwhile, Air India chairman says one of the air Indian airplane machines crashing last week new, while the other is not due to service until December.
In an interview at the times now News Channel, Chandrasekaran says both aircraft machines have “clean” histories.
In fact, the airline says inspects finished 26 in 33 Boeing 787-8 and 787-9 aircraft, all “cleared for service”.
India’s Aviation Regularor ordered further safety checks in Boeing 787 Air India fleet after deadly crash as a “preventing step”.
On Thursday, the plane announced that its flights will be reduced to 16 international routes and suspended in three overseas destinations between June 21.
“Reduces from the voluntary decision to develop a pre-flight safety checks, as well as an increase in further events in the mid-east,” as the airline in a statement.
Announcement arrived in a day after the carrier said it temporarily reduces flights powered by aircraft with 15%.