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Flight Data Recorder From Crashed A320 Found

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  • Flight Data Recorder From Crashed A320 Found

    FLIGHT DATA RECORDER FROM CRASHED A320 FOUND

    ITAR-TASS, Russia
    May 22 2006

    MOSCOW, May 22 (Itar-Tass) -- One of the two flight data recorders
    from the Armenian Airbus-320 passenger plane, which crashed into the
    Black Sea off Sochi on May 3, was found on Monday, Russian Transport
    Minister Igor Levitin said.

    The search for the second "black box" will start this night, he said.

    The first "black box" was lifted from the seabed at about 3.05 p.m.
    (1105 GMT). "The flight data recorder was found under a layer of
    soil. The operation to lift it began at 09:00 Moscow time and lasted
    six hours. The 'black box' has been sent to Moscow for deciphering.

    The second data recorder may be not far from the place where the
    first one was found," the operational headquarters told Itar-Tass.

    The head of the Interstate Aviation Committee, Tatyana Anodina, said,
    "The found flight data recorder is badly damaged because of strong
    impact and because of lying in an aggressive environment."

    She said data from the recorder would be analysed by a standard
    procedure that will involve officials from Armenia, France, and Russia.

    The operation to lift the flight data recorders started last Tuesday
    but was interrupted by a strong side wind that constantly carried
    away the ship, which is operating the RT-1000 apparatus, which is
    conducting the search for the flight recorders.

    Silt on the seabed complicated the work, covering the video camera
    and the searchlights. The team had to raise the apparatus several
    times to clean them. It takes 40 minutes for the apparatus to sink
    and as much to come back to the surface.

    The apparatus had not participated in such operations before. It
    raised only geological samples weighing up to 20 kilogrammes and did
    not work at such depths.

    The device is capable to lift fragments of a plane weighing up to
    12 kilogrammes and the two flight recorders, each weighing seven
    kilogrammes, the head of the Federal Agency for Sea and River
    Transport, Alexander Davydenko, said.

    The RT-1000 is a system consisting of control and lifting equipment
    and the apparatus itself with photo and video equipment and a hydraulic
    manipulator operating in all directions.

    Davydenko said the operation would involve several groups of 18
    people. Each will work for eight hours.

    The Navigator's crew obtained the first television image of the flight
    recorders lying at the depth of almost 500 metres, using the top-notch
    research complex Kalmar.

    The Kalmar equipment was provided by the department for salvage and
    emergency operations based in the port city of Novorossisk.

    The designer of the complex, the Russian corporation Tetis-Pro,
    made the Kalmar for the Russian Navy. When the A-320 crashed, the
    complex, which includes a sonic depth-tester having the functions of
    a side-looking sonar, was still in the phase of testing.

    The Kalmar is capable of tracking down objects at the depths of down
    to 600 meters.

    The flight recorders are lying on the seabed 496 metres from the
    surface and about five metres apart. "The visibility is sufficient
    for the work to be done," the minister said.

    Flight recorders used on aircraft of the Airbus-320 type withstand
    the depth of up to 6,000 meters for 30 days, experts from the French
    air crash investigation bureau said.

    They said that flight recorders' radio beacons keep working during
    the 30-day period.

    One of the flight recorders registers flight parameters, including the
    speed, height and direction of the flight and the autopilot operation,
    each second. The other gadget records conversations in the cockpit.

    Each flight recorder weighs 10 kilograms, including a seven-kilogram
    armoured casing for the gadget. The casing can withstand water pressure
    at a depth of 6,000 meters, the temperature of 1,100 degrees Celsius,
    and the compression of 2.2 tonnes.

    The bureau retrieved flight recorders from the depth of over 1,000
    meters in the Red Sea in January 2004, when an Egyptian plane crashed
    near the Sharm-el-Sheikh resort. The rescuers were using a Scorpio
    deep-water apparatus.

    A technical commission investigating the Sochi air crash, which is
    led by the CIS Interstate Aviation Committee, has asked French experts
    to help find A-320 flight recorders.

    Of 113 people who were abroad the plane, 51 bodies have been found
    so far.

    The Airbus A-320 of the Armenian airline Armavia plunged into the
    Black Sea as it was making a landing manoeuvre in the early hours of
    May 3. The accident claimed the lives of 113 people.
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