Air France 447 Black Boxes Readable 116
An anonymous reader writes "It's not a lengthy press release, but it's good news: the memory cards for the flight data and cockpit voice recorders from the Air France 447 crash in 2009, recently recovered from the sea floor almost two years later, are readable. The data was recovered over the weekend and includes the full two hours of cockpit recording. Apparently it will take weeks for analysis of the data, but it looks like the challenging recovery effort is paying off in a big way. Hopefully detailed answers about the cause of the crash will follow."
Yey for solid-state memory! (Score:2)
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It's probably in French.
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Probably an endless stream of cussing towards Airbus and "that damned computer".
The only wires planes should fly by should be steel wires.
Re:Yey for solid-state memory! (Score:5, Insightful)
Tell that to B-2 pilots.
Actually scratch that. Tell that to ANY modern pilot, be he military or civilian. For added bonus, tell that to greens all over the world and be lynched on the spot, as unstable aircraft are significantly more fuel efficient and can only be flown with fly-by-wire. Trying to fly it manually will result in very spectacular and fiery ending.
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"result in very spectacular and fiery ending."
Is it irony that you should choose this phraseology to describe the perils of not flying by wire when this was the exact fate of Air France 447?
Sorry..I'm old fashion. Steel cables or worst case, hydraulics. Better yet...both!
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Where did you read that?
Care to provide a citation. As far as I know CASA and other agencies dont have a clue why AF447 crashed.
This is why the black box will take so long to analyse (including verifying the contents of the black box itself).
Until then, I'm sticking with what Luckyo said. Modern planes, especially the tail-less delta winged variety are not easy to fly unassisted.
BTW, in the age of fly by wire, pilot error remains the number one cause of acc
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No. Give me a citation to the definitive cause of the crash.
You've said nothing about the cause.
Using that evidence I propose that they upset the invisible pink unicorn and were torn asunder by the noodly appendages of the Blessed FSM.
Of course I'm not going to provide a citation because there was a spectacular crash that proves everything I said.
What I was saying is that he choose to describe the end result of flying large planes without fly-by-wire using a same description of what undoubtedly happened to Air France 447
Bad straw
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BTW, in the age of fly by wire, pilot error remains the number one cause of accidents.
I believe the reason for that is that when it all goes wrong the computer disengages the autopilot and hands control over to the meat pilots...
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Because planes with manually controlled hydraulics never had control failures or crashed, ever. Oh, and congratulations on your psychic powers for knowing that the crash was caused by a fly-by-wire failure before any of the evidence has been evaluated. Can you tell me where I should be investing in the stock market?
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There are no unstable aircraft. All aircraft are stable otherwise they won't be controllable. There are SOME aircraft that are staticly unstable - computerized flight contr
stable flight (Score:2)
Your Boeings and Airbuses that serve commercial aviation are inherently stable.
I don't believe its as black and white as stable vs unstable anymore. You yourself point out the fact that the margin of error is very small. My understanding is that the A330 is only stable in an extremely narrow flight envelope. It does have fixed pitch/power settings that can be used if the computers fail, but they are extremely suboptimal, so instead the computer fly's it in ranges that would result in a near instant stall if
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Trust me, it's not modern airline pilots who are screaming that.
Not to make light with a car analogy, but.... :)
I was driving out to watch the shuttle launch this weekend (yes, it was cool, even though there were low clouds). About 45 minutes into the trip, my truck stalled. It took a few tries, and it started back up. I happened to have my OBD-II reader with me, so I stopped at the next exit and checked for codes. No current codes, but a pending code for an intermit
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The connectors used to interface with the sensors are however the cheapest you can get that has a vibration-rating.
It's sad, but there are connectors that will last the life of a car, but they will most likely never be found in one due to cost. Most car-connectors aren't even properly dust and mosture-proofed.
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Well, most automotive sensors I've seen for essential purposes (like engine and drivetrain monitoring and controls), are "Weatherpack" connectors, which do an excellent job. I don't know how the sensors I replaced were damaged, but it was physically obvious on the interior portion. I haven't seen a failed weatherpack connector yet. I have seem some that weren't attached correctly (stuffed in "good enough", but not electrically sound).
Most aviation connections that I've seen
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I had a Weatherpak connector (not quoted, because I believe it actually was a Weatherpak(tm) and not just something similar) fail: The connector on the coolant temperature sensor on my work truck broke into little pieces when I was changing the spark plug wires, just a few weeks ago.
Of course, changing plug wires is one of the lowest-impact maintenance events that ever happens on a vehicle. If I'd broken it doing something else (like wrenching out a stuck spark plug with a breaker bar, two u-joints, vario
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I can't say that I recall ever seeing a broken WeatherPak connector. Well, unless someone took a screwdriver or hammer to it. :)
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The damning thing about this accident is that the manufacturer told Air France that pitons freezing over were a problem and that they should be changed. Air France started doing it but had not got around to this aircraft yet. Of course we don't know for sure that it was piton failure but it seems like the most reasonable explanation given the available evidence.
Much like Fukushima a company knew there was a potential problem but figured that it wasn't urgent enough to spend a lot of money on. In both cases
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Ya, a lot of things get a low priority if they aren't causing problems all the time. So an engine stalls occasionally, or the pitot tube freezes sometimes, it's not catastrophic. Pilots learn work-arounds until the problem is fixed. Well, until we see something catastrophic like this.
I agree, it does sound like the pitot tube failure. Being where it crashed, I don't think we'll be able to find out exactly what happened. It could have been ice (most likely), but it could ha
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Yup, because no aircraft controlled by steel wires has ever crashed, had a malfunction, had a gearing jam, had a wire snap, had any number of other mechanical issues.
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Or this: [midwestexp...rlines.org]
a Midwest charter MD-81 carrying then presidential candidate Barack Obama, made an emergency landing at Lamber Filed in St. Louis, Missouri after an evacuation slide inside the plane underneath the tail in the airstair passage way deployed, interfering with the plane’s control cables.
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Oblig: Futurama (Score:2)
It's probably in French.
Farnsworth: And this is my universal translator. Unfortunately so far it only translates into an incomprehensible dead language.
Cubert: Hello.
Universal Translator: Bonjour!
Farnsworth: Crazy gibberish!
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They may take whatever time they like on the rest, but I would urge them to start by giving it a good listen.
Then they can submit a initial assumption based on this alone, and just make a point of it being preliminary.
After all, we are dying (bad choice of word? sorry) to know.
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Don't you think listening to it should be a first step?
No. I think the first step is to transfer the data onto a safe medium so that they can listen to it without risking damage to the box.
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But I do agree, a working-copy is ofcource a first step, after a copy of the original just in case...
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They already took a copy. But I do agree, a working-copy is ofcource a first step, after a copy of the original just in case...
I thought we were all computer professionals here?! Step one: Run all reports and fixes directly on a production system without testing. [duck-able comment /]
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No, the first step is to announce you have it in your safe, then see which three-letter agency tries to steal it.
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There's a lot more information than just the voice recordings. They'll likely have a reasonable guess fairly quickly, but it takes time to piece together a clear picture of what happened. It may turn out that the voice recordings don't reveal much at all. Often it's a bunch of routine chatter followed by sudden clipped brief exchanges while the pilots struggle to deal with whatever emergency has arisen.
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Once they've filtered the cockpit voice recordings. There'll be all kinds of noise, especially during a major storm. Towards the end, there'll be a multitude of sirens, klaxons, buzzers and alarm clocks going off. But you can't just filter any old noise, you have to filter out the noise that adds nothing but keep in all the noise that is important. That's harder than just applying a basic filter.
Try transcribing the dialog off a movie without rewinding it. You'll find it's hard. Takes longer than the movie
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On a sidenote: If there is only 2 hours of voice recording, why will it take weeks to listen to it?
flight data probably - lots of numbers the techs need to make sense of
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The article says that they "recovered the complete contents of the flight data recorder ***and*** the last two hours of cockpit conversation" It wont take two weeks to listen to two hours of audio, it will take two weeks to analyse " the complete contents of the flight data recorder" along with "the last two hours of cockpit conversation"
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This is a very important point. The voice recordings will not make sense or give an accurate picture of what happened without being put in the proper context. In this case, the context of what was happening in the flight and what the aircraft told them about it in synchronization with the voice recordings. The voice recording on its own *could* give a completely misleading view of what happened otherwise.
I'm curious of whether this will help convict or exonerate Air Bus on their manslaughter charges.
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Two hours voice recording, data logs from a few hundred sensors, it all has to be done meticulously and perfectly in accordance with aviation authorities from Brazil, the UK, France, Germany and the United States. And lawyers, alot of lawyers.
"The download was completed in the presence of two Brazilian investigators of the Aeronautical Accidents Investigation and Prevention Center (CENIPA), two British investigators of the Air Accidents Investigation Branch (AAIB), two German investigators of the German Fed
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You have millions of data points from a ton of sensors (over 200, I think it's closer to 450), the time isn't in making copies, the time is going to be plugging all that data into the simulators at Airbus and seeing what the data points to.
Airbus, Air France, the German, American, French and British investigators get copies and they run the sims too.
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you do realize they not only look at the data, but at the binary position of each bit stored to determine it's authenticity.
The raw stored data while containing the story is checked for anomalies just as careful as the story itself.
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On a sidenote: If there is only 2 hours of voice recording, why will it take weeks to listen to it?
Obviously you can't have the whole investigation team shorting Airbus stock right away, that would be too obvious; you need time for some "regularly scheduled transactions".
On a more serious note, there is 2 hours of voice recording plus lots of instrument data. Better to go through it thoroughly and recover everything you can rather than immediately issue a report just to satiate the curiosity of the public. I mean, it isn't like there is a rush - what are the chances that another [reuters.com] A330 might fall out of th
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I predict that the last word on the CVR will be Merde.
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That or Dieu.
The audio is the easy part (Score:1)
I work as an aerospace engineer and we use similar methods during design testing. It's not just cockpit audio that is recorded, there are tens or hundreds of thousands of parameters from systems all over the aircraft. To be honest, the audio may not even be that useful, if it happened fast enough there is a good chance the pilots didn't even know what was going on.
To go through 100,000 variables and prove beyond reasonable doubt that a specific variable directly caused the crash will probably take far more
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Most likely the investigators will not be listening to it like most people listen to a news broadcast. They will repeatedly be going over every second of the voice recording analyzing every pop, hiss, bang, etc. They will be analyzing what the pilots are saying and how they are saying it. (Are they stressed? Are they relaxed?). They will also been matching the audio track with the data track in terms of timeline and looking for any clues that the verbal or nonverbal sounds can provide. i.e. At 1:34:42, the
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Most likely the investigators will not be listening to it like most people listen to a news broadcast. They will repeatedly be going over every second of the voice recording analyzing every pop, hiss, bang, etc.
For this flight, the flight data is the crucial issue. It's known from the maintenance telemetry that there were some system failures prior to the accident. The data from the aircraft systems is the big issue. It's non-trivial to analyze. Often, especially on newer aircraft where there's a lot of data, the data can be converted into a format that can be loaded into an aircraft simulator, allowing investigators to replay the accident. That was done with the aircraft that landed in the Hudson River.
The co
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its all in making sure that the data can be proven to be forensically valid.
that and getting 2 Catholic Priests 2 Protestant Ministers
2 Rabbis 2 Muslim Iams? and 2 Wiccans in a room that won't fight is a bit hard to do.
they not only have to plug all the data in from all the sensors they have to be able to prove somebody didn't find the recorder mess with it and then dump it back on the ocean.
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I believe most modern aircraft have been using some form of solid-state memory since the 90s. Probably one of the very first uses of higher-density flash storage media, since the only way to break it is you literally break the silicon inside, especially once the board is built and tested and then potted inside which turns it into a really solid mass.
Cost isn't that big of an issue since these recorders already are pretty expensive to begin with, so eve
But we already know the cause of the crash. (Score:2)
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bhk4HcxhZQM [youtube.com]
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http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=I16_8l0yS-g [youtube.com]
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Pilots talk about cheese, the flight attendants ass for 1:59, strange voice yells "alluhu ackbar", tape ends.
So I guess we'll never know what happened!
It was a trap!
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Maybe the co-pilot kept deflating despite the best efforts of the captain to keep him upright.
Cause of the crash? (Score:2)
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Pretty amazing tech (Score:4, Interesting)
Penetration Resistance 500 lb. weight from 10 feet
Static Crush 5000 lbs., 5 minutes
High Temperature Fire 1100 C, 30 minutes
Low Temperature Fire 260 C, 10 hours
Deep Sea Pressure and 20,000 feet, 30 days
Sea Water/Fluids Immersion Per ED-56a
The CSMU design has been fully qualified to these requirements and, in fact, exceeds them by considerable margin in key survival areas:
Impact shock has been successfully demonstrated at 4800 G's
High temperature fire exposure has been tested to 60 minutes
Low temperature fire was tested immediately after exposure to 1100 C fire.
From here [scribd.com]. Check out the physical design on page 8.
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And Hulk Hogan whacked it with a folding chair a few times for good measure.
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Nothing can withstand Chuck Norris.
The one that impresses me most is "High Temperature Fire 1100 C, 30 minutes".
That's really hot. Either they can make the thing with no polymers, or some polymer can endure 1100C. Whichever it is, it is amazing.
The document GP linked to also says the High Temperature Fire test was done for *60* minutes, and the Low Temperature Fire test was done immediately after the High Temperature Fire test. Wow.
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I think they can up their estimated duration by an order of magnitude now...
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Impact Shock 3400G, 6.5 milliseconds
I did the math out of curiosity, and that means it's supposed to be able to stop from 780km/h in 70cm. Holy Shit!
Impact shock has been successfully demonstrated at 4800 G's
If it's still 6.5ms, that's 1100km/h to 0 in one meter. Holy fucking shit!
Re:I wonder if NOVA got it right. (Score:5, Interesting)
This was a very interesting documentary [pbs.org]. I was particularly interested in the inferences about the user interface approach of Airbus versus Boeing. In short, Airbus planes are controlled with joysticks that translate pilot intentions into actual executable commands to the control surfaces. If the pilot tells the computer to do something stupid, the computer won't do it. Contrast this with Boeing, where the pilots control the plane with a proper control stick that gives more effective feedback to the pilots. In a Boeing airplane, when the computer lowers engine power on autopilot, the engine control lever actually moves in a very visible way. However, on Airbus planes, the levers DO NOT move. The only indication to a pilot that the power has dropped is a small circular readout on a computer screen. The Nova scientists theorized that the pilots didn't realize that the computer had lowered power in anticipation of flying through a thunderstorm, or at least that they realized it too late. They theorize that for about a minute the pilots were flying the plane as if the engines were on high power, when they were actually on a much lower power setting. This, combined with a lack of reliable airspeed data may have caused the pilots to put the plane in an unrecoverable mode of flight. Or maybe it was different. We will know soon enough.
BTW, for those of you outside the US, the above video link won't work. I think the video is on bittorrent somewhere. It is definitely worth watching if you haven't seen it.
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I have a friend in Canada who, at least in the recent past with some alternate PBS shows, has been able to view video directly from the PBS site. So
Troubling (Score:2)
To be fair, I'm not sure such a scenario would be impossible w.r.t. the FAA and Boeing too.
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I think you (or the documentary) misunderstood the Airbus design. On their aircraft the throttle is to set the desired thrust, a bit like setting cruse control in your car to a given speed which it then tries to match. Even on a Boeing aircraft the pilot should never use the position of the sticks to indicate thrust levels because if an engine is failing it might not be producing the requested amount. Therefore on both aircraft the readout of actual measured levels is the only reliable indication.
The proble
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On their aircraft the throttle is to set the desired thrust, a bit like setting cruse control in your car to a given speed which it then tries to match. Even on a Boeing aircraft the pilot should never use the position of the sticks to indicate thrust levels because if an engine is failing it might not be producing the requested amount. Therefore on both aircraft the readout of actual measured levels is the only reliable indication.
Perhaps I wasn't specific enough in my comments. The way I understood it from the documentary, on an Airbus, a pilot's movement of the engine control lever sends a signal to the computer to increase or decrease the power. When the autopilot on an Airbus modifies the power setting, the physical control levers do not give an indication of the change (or the attempted change). On a Boeing, an autopilot change is reflected in a physical movement of the control lever. I agree with you that a pilot should not
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the pilots should still be able to bring the aircraft to area where visual flight rule is possible.
The pilots should be able to fly the plane without airspeed data, according to the Nova documentary. They just set the engine to a particular level and maintain a particular angle of attack. The Nova documentary speculated that due to a variety of factors and distractions that the pilots were unaware of the actual power settings of the airplane. Apparently the airspeed/angle of attack window is quite narrow at that altitude, and if the plane deviates from that window, the airplane may become uncontrollab
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My gf used to do rescue operations in the military for downed aircraft. In one situation the plane was flying upside down and the pilot rammed the aircraft into the ground thinking he was going up at night as he did not know up from down.
I do not know if the sensors which show orientation were functioning properly or not as they are probably unrelated to the ones that froze up. My opinion is an electrical fault shorted the instruments as data from the flight show this.
This could of created haywire on the co
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One witness claimed he saw the aircraft fly down sparkling in pieces and fire.
I am unaware of witnesses to this particular crash. It was in the middle of the Atlantic. If there were direct witnesses, why did it take so long to find the wreckage?
The whole situation is bad and I wonder why the pilots didn't fly around these storms?
The Nova documentary speculated that a smaller storm in their immediate path blocked the radar signals from a larger storm behind it. By the time they realized there was a large ring of storm cells around them, they could not escape. They have radar records of that night, which can be combined with the known flight path. The above hypothe
Need the blackbox company to make the plane (Score:1)
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We have those, they're called ships.
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Seems the one part that you can rely on.
It can definitely done, but it will be too heavy to fly.
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From the telemetry data that I've hear of from the PBS Nova documentary, it seems highly likely that the pitots failed nearly simultaneously, robbing the pilots of airspeed data. Even if they can argue that the pilots could have saved the plane, those pitots should never have failed/froze. There is blame to go around I think.
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Likely as not, nothing will jump out, especially if, say, the autopilot is flying the aircraft using faulty input, e.g., input from an ice-covered sensor. That is likely to cause other sensors to show perverse readings that may (or may not) be very subtle, and may have multiple or ambiguous causes.
Perhaps, but what will be very interesting is the data on the power settings on the airplane, especially in regard to (a) the autopilot reducing power to 70% in anticipation of passing through a thunderstorm and (b) the pilot's changing of that setting to a more appropriate level. The key question is whether or not the autopilot lowered the power before kicking off due to bad airspeed data, and whether or not (and when!) the pilots realized that the power was lower and what they did in response. That goes
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I skimmed through some of the data that was sent through the air, and assuming the time stamps are right, there were inconsistencies that made me suspect some sort of fire in avionics (possibly due to Kapton insulation). Of course, if the time stamps were based on when the data was transmitted rather than when the event occurred, then it's useless, and I withdraw that theory.
I'm certainly interested to see what comes out of all of this, either way.
It's readable and it says (Score:1)
Prediction (Score:2)
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Last words: "What is it doing now?"
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Sacre Bleu! Merde!