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Black box of IX-812 recovered

Updated - November 28, 2021 08:55 pm IST

Published - May 25, 2010 10:55 am IST - Mangalore

After three days of search in the crash site at Mangalore

The investigation team of the Directorate-General of Civil Aviation (DGCA) recovered the Digital Flight Data Recorder (DFDR), commonly known as black box, on Tuesday morning, three days after the Boeing 737-800 aircraft with 166 people on board crashed after overshooting the runway here.

One hundred and fifty-eight people, including the six-member crew, died when the Air India Express IX-812 flight from Dubai plunged into the woods after crashing through the perimeter wall at high speed, split into two and caught fire, on Saturday morning. Eight people survived the accident.

A press release issued by the Civil Aviation Ministry in New Delhi described the black box as “the most vital source of information [about the accident].”

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“The DFDR has been handed over to the air safety team of the DGCA and is being brought back to the DGCA headquarters. The DFDR, though apparently impacted by the crash, will be subjected to further tests for decoding and made available to the investigators,” it said.

The release said the investigation team undertook an intense combing of the wider area at the site with the assistance of Karnataka government officials and other specialised technical services on Tuesday.

The device was recovered around 10 a.m., said Deputy Superintendent of Police S. Girish, whose men had been guarding the area.

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Mr. Girish said the lid of the one-foot-long device was missing, and its contents, which included a prominent cylindrical object, were charred. The cylindrical object is the ‘Crash Survivable Memory Unit' (CSMU) and, as the name suggests, it is the most important component of the unit which also has an inbuilt power supply system.

According to investigators, despite being charred on the surface, the CSMU's data was unlikely to be affected. The outer layer, or housing of this robust unit, is usually made of steel armour. Inside the armour is a layer of insulation, and inside this layer is a thick “thermal block.” The memory board, which stores all the flight data, is at the core of this unit. Usually painted in orange, the black box lost its colour, having been exposed to extremely high temperature.

The DGCA team recovered the Cockpit Voice Recorder and Digital Flight Data Acquisition Unit on Sunday.

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