Recording of flight data ceased four minutes before Jeju Air crash killed 179 people, says transport ministry
Recording of flight data ceased four minutes before Jeju Air crash killed 179 people, says transport ministry
Investigators from the United States, including Boeing, are assisting South Korea after the Jeju Air plane crash that killed 179 people.
The team was flying into LAX for their Saturday game against UCLA, which the Bulldogs lost 62-65.
Splitting the blanket?
Because Airbus has circulated the statement that the crash was due to “technical problems” (when no official statement should be made prior to an investigation), 49% Saudi-owned Yemenia Airlines is rumored likely to pull it’s order for 10 Airbus A350s. The order has been standing since a 2007 airshow, and involves millions. The Yemenia Airlines crash that occurred during a stormy weather landing on the Comoros Islands involved an Airbus.
Just released from University of Colorado Hospital is the pilot of the continental Boeing that crashed in Denver on December 20. Thirty-eight were hospitalized; one was released with the pilot. Two remain still in the hospital in recovery.
Because the FAA has received reports about unmanned aircraft systems (UAS, or “drones”) around JFK, the FAA is developing drone detecting technology. FAA Senior Advisor on UAS Integration, Marke “Hoot” Gibson, said “This effort at JFK reflects everyone’s commitment to safety.” The FAA, FBI, Department of Homeland Security (DHS), Department of Justice, Queens District Attorney’s Office and the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey participated in recent tests. U.S. Government is expanding on efforts to identify and deploy countermeasures to neutralize any threat posed by rogue UASs.
At JFK, five rotorcraft and fixed wing UAS participated in system evaluations this May. Approximately 40 tests took place. The JFK tests follow up on research performed at Atlantic City International Airport. Griffiss International Airport test site in Rome, NY, provided the flight commander, and expertise in planning the individual tests.
The NUAIR Alliance was part of the largest test of NASA’s UAS traffic management (UTM) research platform on April 19, 2016. That test consisted of 22 drones flying simultaneously at six different FAA UAS test site locations around the country.
David Warren, a man whose father died in the Miss Hobart plane crash in Bass Strait in 1934, may be little known, but he is responsible for what may be the 20th century’s most important aviation safety innovation; and today we mourn his loss. David Warren, creator of the cockpit voice recorder, died on July 19.
You can see his bio here at the Australian Department of Defence.