Flight recorders from the passenger jet that crashed in South Korea last month, killing more than 170 people, stopped working minutes before the plane belly-landed and exploded on the runway ...
Korean investigators' efforts to understand the Jeju Air Boeing 737-800 crash at Muan have suffered a setback after both ...
Flight data and cockpit voice recorders on the South Korean Jeju Air plane which crashed last month, killing 179 people, stopped recording about four minutes before it came down at Muan airport, ...
The plane's flight data and cockpit audio recorders — the so-called "black boxes" — were recovered quickly and first moved to a research center at Seoul's Gimpo International Airport for analysis.
They are mandatory and the aim is to preserve clues from cockpit sounds and data to help prevent future accidents, but not to ...