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'Black boxes' from crashed Armenian plane brought to Paris

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  • 'Black boxes' from crashed Armenian plane brought to Paris

    ITAR-TASS News Agency
    TASS
    May 27, 2006 Saturday 02:49 PM EST

    ''Black boxes'' from crashed Armenian plane brought to Paris

    by Mikhail Timofeyev


    Two flight data recorders from the Armenian Airbus-320 passenger
    plane that crashed in the Black Sea of Sochi on May 3 were brought to
    Paris on Saturday.

    Specialists will examine and open the so-called ``black boxes'' to
    retrieve memory microchips that record different flight data
    parameters and conversations in the cockpit.

    After that the recordings will be analysed in Moscow by experts from
    Russia, Armenia, and France.

    The CIS Interstate Aviation Committee said earlier it would take at
    least 15 days to analyse the data in the recorders.

    IAC head Tatyana Anodina said about 2,000 planes of the Airbus-320
    type are operating around the world, and everybody wants to get full
    and objective data about the accident as soon as possible.

    According to Anodina, two black boxes from the crashed plane record
    conversations in the cockpit and plane system data. ``Unfortunately
    the voice recorder was seriously damaged but the data recorder,
    according to preliminary information, is in excellent condition.
    Recordings will be analysed in Russia, using equipment from France
    where the Airbus-320 airliner was designed,'' she said.

    There were three flight data recorders aboard the plane but no
    signals from the third one have ever been registered, which suggests
    that its radio beacon was knocked off during the crash.

    Flight data 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.

    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.

    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.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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