Female pilot, Navy officer flight student presumed dead after plane…

Similar Posts

  • Black boxes of cargo plane that crashed in HK retrieved

    The Air Accident Investigation Authority retrieved the Flight Data Recorder and the Cockpit Voice Recorder from the B744 cargo aircraft which ditched into the sea on Monday.

    Read More

    To include the featured image in your Twitter Card, please tap or click their icon a second time.
  • Runway Safety Bed Stops Skidding Plane in Virginia

    The concrete bed stopped a commercial flight that lost control during landing. The safety system slows a runaway aircraft by collapsing under its weight.

    Read More

    To include the featured image in your Twitter Card, please tap or click their icon a second time.
  • India Not On Track with Mangalore Crash Investigation

    An Indian newspaper (Okay, it is the Times of India, you dragged it out of me) has revealed that “According to Civil Aviation Requirement (CAR) Section 5 (Air Safety), Series C, Part I issued on 13 October 2006, preliminary report by the inspector of accidents/inquiry officer should be finalized within 10 days of the accident.”

    Furthermore, the preliminary report should be in the format provided by International Civil Aviation Organization, and the deadline for submitting the preliminary investigation report for the May 22 Air India Express Mangalore aircrash was June 2.

    Here it is nearly halfway through July and no report.

    Of course, never mind that other countries take a year or more to finalize their reports. Silly of other countries. After all, other countries carefully keep the wreckage. Apparently the DGCA doesn’t think that’s necessary, because they are reported to have just thrown out the wreckage with the garbage–after having let it sit in the elements for more than a month.

    A court of inquiry has been formed to investigate the Mangalore air tragedy. The information uploaded on the ministry of civil aviation’s website under the title “initial investigation report” is not the preliminary investigation report but is “only put up to keep the public informed about the progress of the investigation.”

    So, if you’re wondering what happens in India when the DGCA (India’s aviation equivalent of US. FAA/NTSB) officials violate their own rules?

    Apparently nothing.

    To include the featured image in your Twitter Card, please tap or click their icon a second time.