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Flight recorder

A flight recorder is an electronic recording device placed in an aircraft for the purpose of facilitating the investigation of aviation accidents and incidents. The device may often be referred to colloquially as a "black box", an outdated name which has become a misnomer—they are now required to be painted bright orange, to aid in their recovery after accidents.

A modern flight data recorder; the underwater locator beacon is the small cylinder on the far right. (Translation of warning message in French: "Flight recorder do not open".) The warning appears in English on the other side.
Cold War-era Soviet MS-61 cockpit voice recorder from a MiG-21 interceptor

There are two types of flight recording devices: the flight data recorder (FDR) preserves the recent history of the flight through the recording of dozens of parameters collected several times per second; the cockpit voice recorder (CVR) preserves the recent history of the sounds in the cockpit, including the conversation of the pilots. The two devices may be combined into a single unit. Together, the FDR and CVR objectively document the aircraft's flight history, which may assist in any later investigation.

The two flight recorders are required by international regulation, overseen by the International Civil Aviation Organization, to be capable of surviving the conditions likely to be encountered in a severe aircraft accident. For this reason, they are typically specified to withstand an impact of 3400 g and temperatures of over 1,000 °C (1,830 °F), as required by EUROCAE ED-112. They have been a mandatory requirement in commercial aircraft in the United States since 1967. After the unexplained disappearance of Malaysia Airlines Flight 370 in 2014, commentators have called for live streaming of data to the ground, as well as extending the battery life of the underwater locator beacons.

History edit

 
A Fairchild A100 cockpit voice recorder, on display in the Deutsches Museum. This is a magnetic-tape unit built to an old standard, TSO C84, as shown on the nameplate. The text on the side in French says "Flight recorder do not open".

Early designs edit

One of the earliest and proven attempts was made by François Hussenot and Paul Beaudouin in 1939 at the Marignane flight test center, France, with their "type HB" flight recorder; they were essentially photograph-based flight recorders, because the record was made on a scrolling photographic film 8 metres (8.7 yd) long by 88 millimetres (3.5 in) wide. The latent image was made by a thin ray of light deviated by a mirror tilted according to the magnitude of the data to be recorded (altitude, speed, etc.).[1] A pre-production run of 25 "HB" recorders was ordered in 1941 and HB recorders remained in use in French flight test centers well into the 1970s.[2][3]

In 1947, Hussenot founded the Société Française des Instruments de Mesure with Beaudouin and another associate, so as to market his invention, which was also known as the "hussenograph". This company went on to become a major supplier of data recorders, used not only aboard aircraft but also trains and other vehicles. SFIM is today part of the Safran group and is still present in the flight recorder market. The advantage of the film technology was that it could be easily developed afterwards and provides a durable, visual feedback of the flight parameters without needing any playback device. On the other hand, unlike magnetic tapes or later flash memory-based technology, a photographic film cannot be erased and reused, and so must be changed periodically. The technology was reserved for one-shot uses, mostly during planned test flights: it was not mounted aboard civilian aircraft during routine commercial flights. Also, cockpit conversation was not recorded.

Another form of flight data recorder was developed in the UK during World War II. Len Harrison and Vic Husband developed a unit that could withstand a crash and fire to keep the flight data intact. The unit was the forerunner of today's recorders, in being able to withstand conditions that aircrew could not. It used copper foil as the recording medium, with various styli, corresponding to various instruments or aircraft controls, indenting the foil. The foil was periodically advanced at set time intervals, giving a history of the aircraft's instrument readings and control settings. The unit was developed at Farnborough for the Ministry of Aircraft Production. At the war's end the Ministry got Harrison and Husband to sign over their invention to it and the Ministry patented it under British patent 19330/45.

The first modern flight data recorder, called "Mata Hari", was created in 1942 by Finnish aviation engineer Veijo Hietala. This black high-tech mechanical box was able to record all important details during test flights of fighter aircraft that the Finnish army repaired or built in its main aviation factory in Tampere, Finland.[4]

During World War II both British and American air forces successfully experimented with aircraft voice recorders.[5] In August 1943 the USAAF conducted an experiment with a magnetic wire recorder to capture the inter-phone conversations of a B-17 bomber flight crew on a combat mission over Nazi-occupied France.[6] The recording was broadcast back to the United States by radio two days afterwards.

Australian designs edit

Video clip of 1985 ABC news report interviewing David Warren about his invention

In 1953, while working at the Aeronautical Research Laboratories (ARL) of the Defence Science and Technology Organisation, in Melbourne,[7] Australian research scientist David Warren conceived a device that would record not only the instrument readings, but also the voices in the cockpit.[8] In 1954 he published a report entitled "A Device for Assisting Investigation into Aircraft Accidents".[9]

Warren built a prototype FDR called "The ARL Flight Memory Unit" in 1956,[9] and in 1958 he built the first combined FDR/CVR prototype.[8][10] It was designed with civilian aircraft in mind, explicitly for post-crash examination purposes.[11] Aviation authorities from around the world were largely uninterested at first, but this changed in 1958 when Sir Robert Hardingham, the secretary of the British Air Registration Board, visited the ARL and was introduced to David Warren.[7] Hardingham realized the significance of the invention and arranged for Warren to demonstrate the prototype in the UK.[9]

The ARL assigned an engineering team to help Warren develop the prototype to the airborne stage. The team, consisting of electronics engineers Lane Sear, Wally Boswell and Ken Fraser, developed a working design that incorporated a fire-resistant and shockproof case, a reliable system for encoding and recording aircraft instrument readings and voice on one wire, and a ground-based decoding device. The ARL system, made by the British firm of S. Davall & Sons Ltd, in Middlesex, was named the "Red Egg" because of its shape and bright red color.[9]

The units were redesigned in 1965 and relocated at the rear of aircraft to increase the probability of successful data retrieval after a crash.[12]

Carriage of data recording equipment became mandatory in UK-registered aircraft in two phases, the first for new turbine-engined public transport category aircraft over 12,000 lb (5,400 kg) in weight was mandated in 1965, with a further requirement in 1966 for piston-engined transports over 60,000 lb (27,000 kg), with the earlier requirement further extended to all jet transports. One of the first UK uses of the data recovered from an aircraft accident was that recovered from the Royston "Midas" data recorder that was on board the British Midland Argonaut involved in the Stockport Air Disaster in 1967.[13]

US designs edit

 
NTSB investigators recover flight data recorder and cockpit voice recorder from UPS Airlines Flight 1354
 
NTSB staff examine the memory boards of the cockpit voice recorder from Atlas Air Flight 3591. The boards may have suffered water damage

A flight recorder was invented and patented in the United States by Professor James J. "Crash" Ryan, a professor of mechanical engineering at the University of Minnesota from 1931 to 1963. Ryan's "Flight Recorder" patent was filed in August 1953 and approved on November 8, 1960, as US Patent 2,959,459.[14] A second patent by Ryan for a "Coding Apparatus For Flight Recorders and the Like" is US Patent 3,075,192[15] dated January 22, 1963. An early prototype of the Ryan Flight Data Recorder is described in the January 2013 Aviation History article "Father of the Black Box" by Scott M. Fisher.[16]

Ryan, also the inventor of the retractable safety seat belt now required in automobiles, began working on the idea of a flight recorder in 1946, and invented the device in response to a 1948 request from the Civil Aeronautics Board aimed at establishing operating procedures to reduce air mishaps. The requirement was for a means of accumulating flight data. The original device was known as the "General Mills Flight Recorder".

The benefits of the flight recorder and the coding apparatus for flight recorders were outlined by Ryan in his study entitled "Economies in Airline Operation with Flight Recorders" which was entered into the Congressional Record in 1956. Ryan's flight recorder maintained a continuing recording of aircraft flight data such as engine exhaust temperature, fuel flow, aircraft velocity, altitude, control surfaces positions, and rate of descent.

A "Cockpit Sound Recorder" (CSR) was independently invented and patented by Edmund A. Boniface Jr., an aeronautical engineer at Lockheed Aircraft Corporation.[17][18][19] He originally filed with the US Patent Office on February 2, 1961, as an "Aircraft Cockpit Sound Recorder".[20] The 1961 invention was viewed by some as an "invasion of privacy". Subsequently Boniface filed again on February 4, 1963, for a "Cockpit Sound Recorder" (US Patent 3,327,067)[17] with the addition of a spring-loaded switch which allowed the pilot to erase the audio/sound tape recording at the conclusion of a safe flight and landing.

Boniface's participation in aircraft crash investigations in the 1940s[21] and in the accident investigations of the loss of one of the wings at cruise altitude on each of two Lockheed Electra turboprop powered aircraft (Flight 542 operated by Braniff Airlines in 1959 and Flight 710 operated by Northwest Orient Airlines in 1961) led to his wondering what the pilots may have said just prior to the wing loss and during the descent as well as the type and nature of any sounds or explosions that may have preceded or occurred during the wing loss.[22]

His patent was for a device for recording audio of pilot remarks and engine or other sounds to be "contained with the in-flight recorder within a sealed container that is shock mounted, fireproofed and made watertight" and "sealed in such a manner as to be capable of withstanding extreme temperatures during a crash fire". The CSR was an analog device which provided a continuous erasing/recording loop (lasting 30 or more minutes) of all sounds (explosion, voice, and the noise of any aircraft structural components undergoing serious fracture and breakage) which could be overheard in the cockpit.[22]

On November 1, 1966, Bobbie R. Allen - director of Bureau of Safety, Civil Aeronautics Board and John S. Leak - chief of Technical Services Section, presented "The Potential Role of Flight Recorders in Aircraft Accident Investigation" at the AIAA/CASI Joint Meeting on Aviation Safety, Toronto, Canada.[23]

Terminology edit

 
GEE airborne equipment, with the R1355 receiver on the left and the Indicator Unit Type 62A "black box" on the right.

The term "black box" was a World War II British phrase, originating with the development of radio, radar, and electronic navigational aids in British and Allied combat aircraft. These often-secret electronic devices were encased in non-reflective black boxes or housings.  The earliest identified reference to "black boxes" occurs in a May 1945 Flight article, "Radar for Airlines", describing the application of wartime RAF radar and navigational aids to civilian aircraft: "The stowage of the 'black boxes' and, even more important, the detrimental effect on performance of external aerials, still remain as a radio and radar problem."[24] (The term "black box" is used with a different meaning in science and engineering, describing a system exclusively by its inputs and outputs, with no information whatsoever about its inner workings.)

Magnetic tape and wire voice recorders had been tested on RAF and USAAF bombers by 1943 thus adding to the assemblage of fielded and experimental electronic devices employed on Allied aircraft.  As early as 1944 aviation writers envisioned use of these recording devices on commercial aircraft to aid incident investigations.[25] When modern flight recorders were proposed to the British Aeronautical Research Council in 1958, the term "black box" was in colloquial use by experts.[26]

By 1967 when flight recorders were mandated by leading aviation countries, the expression had found its way into general use: "These so-called 'black boxes' are, in fact, of fluorescent flame-orange in colour."[27] The formal names of the devices are flight data recorder and cockpit voice recorder. The recorders must be housed in boxes that are bright orange in color to make them more visually conspicuous in the debris after an accident.[28]

Components edit

Flight data recorder edit

 
A typical flight recorder
 
Cockpit voice recorder and flight data recorder, each with an underwater locator beacon on the front
 
An underwater locator beacon; the ballpoint pen provides scale
 
A cockpit voice and data recorder (CVDR), with its attached ULB visible on the left side of the unit
 
A flight data recorder and a cockpit voice recorder installed on their mounting trays in the rear fuselage of an aircraft
 
The flight data recorder for crashed flight MU5735.

A flight data recorder (FDR; also ADR, for accident data recorder) is an electronic device employed to record instructions sent to any electronic systems on an aircraft.

The data recorded by the FDR are used for accident and incident investigation. Due to their importance in investigating accidents, these ICAO-regulated devices are carefully engineered and constructed to withstand the force of a high speed impact and the heat of an intense fire. Contrary to the popular term "black box", the exterior of the FDR is coated with heat-resistant bright orange paint for high visibility in wreckage, and the unit is usually mounted in the aircraft's tail section, where it is more likely to survive a crash. Following an accident, the recovery of the FDR is usually a high priority for the investigating body, as analysis of the recorded parameters can often detect and identify causes or contributing factors.[29]

Modern day FDRs receive inputs via specific data frames from the flight-data acquisition units. They record significant flight parameters, including the control and actuator positions, engine information and time of day. There are 88 parameters required as a minimum under current US federal regulations (only 29 were required until 2002), but some systems monitor many more variables. Generally each parameter is recorded a few times per second, though some units store "bursts" of data at a much higher frequency if the data begin to change quickly. Most FDRs record approximately 17–25 hours of data in a continuous loop.[citation needed] It is required by regulations that an FDR verification check (readout) is performed annually in order to verify that all mandatory parameters are recorded.[citation needed] Many aircraft today are equipped with an "event" button in the cockpit that could be activated by the crew if an abnormality occurs in flight. Pushing the button places a signal on the recording, marking the time of the event.[30]

Modern FDRs are typically double wrapped in strong corrosion-resistant stainless steel or titanium, with high-temperature insulation inside. Modern FDRs are accompanied by an underwater locator beacon that emits an ultrasonic "ping" to aid in detection when submerged. These beacons operate for up to 30 days and are able to operate while immersed to a depth of up to 6,000 meters (20,000 ft).[31][32]

Cockpit voice recorder edit

 
Both side views of a cockpit voice recorder, one type of flight recorder

A cockpit voice recorder (CVR) is a flight recorder used to record the audio environment in the flight deck of an aircraft for the purpose of investigation of accidents and incidents. This is typically achieved by recording the signals of the microphones and earphones of the pilots' headsets and of an area microphone in the roof of the cockpit. The current applicable FAA TSO is C123b titled Cockpit Voice Recorder Equipment.[33]

Where an aircraft is required to carry a CVR and uses digital communications the CVR is required to record such communications with air traffic control unless this is recorded elsewhere. As of 2008 it is an FAA requirement that the recording duration is a minimum of two hours.[34] The European Aviation Safety Agency increased the recording duration to 25 hours in 2021.[35] In 2023 the FAA proposed extending requirements to 25 hours to help in investigations like runway incursions.[36][37]

A standard CVR is capable of recording four channels of audio data for a period of two hours. The original requirement was for a CVR to record for 30 minutes, but this has been found to be insufficient in many cases because significant parts of the audio data needed for a subsequent investigation occurred more than 30 minutes before the end of the recording.[38]

The earliest CVRs used analog wire recording, later replaced by analog magnetic tape. Some of the tape units used two reels, with the tape automatically reversing at each end. The original was the ARL Flight Memory Unit produced in 1957 by Australian David Warren and instrument maker Tych Mirfield.[39][40]

Other units used a single reel, with the tape spliced into a continuous loop, much as in an 8-track cartridge. The tape would circulate and old audio information would be overwritten every 30 minutes. Recovery of sound from magnetic tape often proves difficult if the recorder is recovered from water and its housing has been breached. Thus, the latest designs employ solid-state memory and use fault tolerant digital recording techniques, making them much more resistant to shock, vibration and moisture. With the reduced power requirements of solid-state recorders, it is now practical to incorporate a battery in the units, so that recording can continue until flight termination, even if the aircraft electrical system fails.

Like the FDR, the CVR is typically mounted in the rear of the airplane fuselage to maximize the likelihood of its survival in a crash.[41]

Combined units edit

With the advent of digital recorders, the FDR and CVR can be manufactured in one fireproof, shock proof, and waterproof container as a combined digital cockpit voice and data recorder (CVDR). Currently, CVDRs are manufactured by L3Harris Technologies[42] and Hensoldt[43] among others.

Solid state recorders became commercially practical in 1990, having the advantage of not requiring scheduled maintenance and making the data easier to retrieve. This was extended to the two-hour voice recording in 1995.[44]

Additional equipment edit

Since the 1970s, most large civil jet transports have been additionally equipped with a "quick access recorder" (QAR). This records data on a removable storage medium. Access to the FDR and CVR is necessarily difficult because they must be fitted where they are most likely to survive an accident; they also require specialized equipment to read the recording. The QAR recording medium is readily removable and is designed to be read by equipment attached to a standard desktop computer. In many airlines, the quick access recordings are scanned for "events", an event being a significant deviation from normal operational parameters. This allows operational problems to be detected and eliminated before an accident or incident results.

A flight-data acquisition unit (FDAU) is a unit that receives various discrete, analog and digital parameters from a number of sensors and avionic systems and then routes them to the FDR and, if installed, to the QAR. Information from the FDAU to the FDR is sent via specific data frames, which depend on the aircraft manufacturer.

Many modern aircraft systems are digital or digitally controlled. Very often, the digital system will include built-in test equipment which records information about the operation of the system. This information may also be accessed to assist with the investigation of an accident or incident.

Specifications edit

 
Cockpit voice recorder memory module of PR-GTD, a Gol Transportes Aéreos Boeing 737-8EH SFP, found in the Amazon in Mato Grosso, Brazil.
 
After the crash of Gol Transportes Aéreos Flight 1907, Brazilian Air Force personnel show the recovered flight data recorder

The design of today's FDR is governed by the internationally recognized standards and recommended practices relating to flight recorders which are contained in ICAO Annex 6 which makes reference to industry crashworthiness and fire protection specifications such as those to be found in the European Organisation for Civil Aviation Equipment[45] documents EUROCAE ED55, ED56 Fiken A and ED112 (Minimum Operational Performance Specification for Crash Protected Airborne Recorder Systems). In the United States, the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) regulates all aspects of US aviation, and cites design requirements in their Technical Standard Order,[46] based on the EUROCAE documents (as do the aviation authorities of many other countries).

Currently, EUROCAE specifies that a recorder must be able to withstand an acceleration of 3400 g (33 km/s2) for 6.5 milliseconds. This is roughly equivalent to an impact velocity of 270 knots (310 mph; 500 km/h) and a deceleration or crushing distance of 45 cm (18 in).[47] Additionally, there are requirements for penetration resistance, static crush, high and low temperature fires, deep sea pressure, sea water immersion, and fluid immersion.

EUROCAE ED-112 (Minimum Operational Performance Specification for Crash Protected Airborne Recorder Systems) defines the minimum specification to be met for all aircraft requiring flight recorders for recording of flight data, cockpit audio, images and CNS / ATM digital messages and used for investigations of accidents or incidents.[48] When issued in March 2003 ED-112 superseded previous ED-55 and ED-56A that were separate specifications for FDR and CVR. FAA TSOs for FDR and CVR reference ED-112 for characteristics common to both types.

In order to facilitate recovery of the recorder from an aircraft accident site they are required to be coloured bright yellow or orange with reflective surfaces. All are lettered "Flight recorder do not open" on one side in English and "Enregistreur de vol ne pas ouvrir" in French on the other side. To assist recovery from submerged sites they must be equipped with an underwater locator beacon which is automatically activated in the event of an accident.

 

Regulation edit

In the investigation of the 1960 crash of Trans Australia Airlines Flight 538 at Mackay, Queensland, the inquiry judge strongly recommended that flight recorders be installed in all Australian airliners. Australia became the first country in the world to make cockpit-voice recording compulsory.[49][50]

 
The digital flight data recorder from West Air Sweden Flight 294. All data was collected, even though the rest of the aircraft was heavily fragmented

The United States' first CVR rules were passed in 1964, requiring all turbine and piston aircraft with four or more engines to have CVRs by March 1, 1967.[51] As of 2008 it is an FAA requirement that the CVR recording duration is a minimum of two hours,[34] following the NTSB recommendation that it should be increased from its previously-mandated 30-minute duration.[52] From 2014 the United States requires flight data recorders and cockpit voice recorders on aircraft that have 20 or more passenger seats, or those that have six or more passenger seats, are turbine-powered, and require two pilots.[53]

For US air carriers and manufacturers, the National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB) is responsible for investigating accidents and safety-related incidents. The NTSB also serves in an advisory role for many international investigations not under its formal jurisdiction. The NTSB does not have regulatory authority, but must depend on legislation and other government agencies to act on its safety recommendations.[54] In addition, 49 USC Section 1114(c) prohibits the NTSB from making the audio recordings public except by written transcript.[55]

The ARINC Standards are prepared by the Airlines Electronic Engineering Committee (AEEC). The 700 Series of standards describe the form, fit, and function of avionics equipment installed predominately on transport category aircraft. The FDR is defined by ARINC Characteristic 747. The CVR is defined by ARINC Characteristic 757.[56]

Proposed requirements edit

Deployable recorders edit

The NTSB recommended in 1999 that operators be required to install two sets of CVDR systems, with the second CVDR set being "deployable or ejectable". The "deployable" recorder combines the cockpit voice/flight data recorders and an emergency locator transmitter (ELT) in a single unit. The "deployable" unit would depart the aircraft before impact, activated by sensors. The unit is designed to "eject" and "fly" away from the crash site, to survive the terminal velocity of fall, to float on water indefinitely, and would be equipped with satellite technology for immediate location of crash impact site. The "deployable" CVDR technology has been used by the US Navy since 1993.[57] While the recommendations would involve a massive, expensive retrofit program, government funding would meet cost objections from manufacturers and airlines. Operators would get both sets of recorders (including the currently-used fixed recorder) free of charge. The cost of the second "deployable/ejectable CVDR" (or "black box") was estimated at US$30 million for installation in 500 new aircraft (about $60,000 per new commercial plane).[citation needed]

In the United States, the proposed SAFE Act calls for implementing the NTSB 1999 recommendations. However, so far the SAFE Act legislation has failed to pass Congress, having been introduced in 2003 (H.R. 2632), in 2005 (H.R. 3336), and in 2007 (H.R. 4336).[58] Originally the "Safe Aviation Flight Enhancement (SAFE) Act of 2003"[59] was introduced on June 26, 2003, by Congressman David Price (D-NC) and Congressman John Duncan (R-Tenn.) in a bipartisan effort to ensure investigators have access to information immediately following commercial accidents.[57]

On July 19, 2005, a revised SAFE Act was introduced and referred to the Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure of the US House of Representatives. The bill was referred to the House Subcommittee on Aviation during the 108th, 109th, and 110th Congresses.[60][61][62]

After Malaysia Airlines Flight 370 edit

In the United States, on March 12, 2014, in response to the missing Malaysia Airlines Flight 370, David Price re-introduced the SAFE Act in the US House of Representatives.[63]

The disappearance of Malaysia Airlines Flight 370 demonstrated the limits of the contemporary flight recorder technology, namely how physical possession of the flight recorder device is necessary to help investigate the cause of an aircraft incident. Considering the advances of modern communication, technology commentators called for flight recorders to be supplemented or replaced by a system that provides "live streaming" of data from the aircraft to the ground.[64][65][66] Furthermore, commentators called for the underwater locator beacon's range and battery life to be extended, as well as the outfitting of civil aircraft with the deployable flight recorders typically used in military aircraft. Previous to MH370, the investigators of 2009 Air France Flight 447 urged that the battery life be extended as "rapidly as possible" after the crash's flight recorders went unrecovered for over a year.[67]

After Indonesia AirAsia Flight 8501 edit

On December 28, 2014, Indonesia AirAsia Flight 8501, en route from Surabaya, Indonesia, to Singapore, crashed in bad weather, killing all 155 passengers and seven crew on board.[68]

On January 8, 2015, before the recovery of the flight recorders, an anonymous ICAO representative said: "The time has come that deployable recorders are going to get a serious look."[69] A second ICAO official said that public attention had "galvanized momentum in favour of ejectable recorders on commercial aircraft".[69]

Boeing 737 MAX edit

Live flight data streaming as on the Boeing 777F ecoDemonstrator, plus 20 minutes of data before and after a triggering event, could have removed the uncertainty before the Boeing 737 MAX groundings following the March 2019 Ethiopian Airlines Flight 302 crash.[70]

Image recorders edit

The NTSB has asked for the installation of cockpit image recorders in large transport aircraft to provide information that would supplement existing CVR and FDR data in accident investigations. They have recommended that image recorders be placed into smaller aircraft that are not required to have a CVR or FDR.[71] The rationale is that what is seen on an instrument by the pilots of an aircraft is not necessarily the same as the data sent to the display device. This is particularly true of aircraft equipped with electronic displays (CRT or LCD). A mechanical instrument panel is likely to preserve its last indications, but this is not the case with an electronic display. Such systems, estimated to cost less than $8,000 installed, typically consist of a camera and microphone located in the cockpit to continuously record cockpit instrumentation, the outside viewing area, engine sounds, radio communications, and ambient cockpit sounds. As with conventional CVRs and FDRs, data from such a system is stored in a crash-protected unit to ensure survivability.[71][better source needed] Since the recorders can sometimes be crushed into unreadable pieces, or even located in deep water, some modern units are self-ejecting (taking advantage of kinetic energy at impact to separate themselves from the aircraft) and also equipped with radio emergency locator transmitters and sonar underwater locator beacons to aid in their location.[72]

Cultural references edit

  • The artwork for the band Rammstein's album Reise, Reise is made to look like a CVR; it also includes a recording from a crash. The recording is from the last 1–2 minutes of the CVR of Japan Airlines Flight 123, which crashed on August 12, 1985, killing 520 people; JAL123 is the deadliest single-aircraft disaster in history.[73]
  • Members of the performing arts collective Collective:Unconscious made a theatrical presentation of a play called Charlie Victor Romeo with a script based on transcripts from CVR voice recordings of nine aircraft emergencies. The play features the famous United Airlines Flight 232 that crash-landed in a cornfield near Sioux City, Iowa, after suffering a catastrophic failure of one engine and most flight controls.[74]
  • Survivor, a novel by American author Chuck Palahniuk, is about a cult member who dictates his life story to a flight recorder before the plane runs out of fuel and crashes.[75]
  • In stand-up comedy, many jokes have been made asking why the entire airplane isn't made out of the material used to make black boxes, given that the black box survives the crash. This is referenced in the 2001 Chris Rock movie Down to Earth,[76] although the original joke is widely credited to George Carlin.[77]

See also edit

References edit

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Further reading edit

  • American Aviation Historical Society, Volume 59, Fall-Winter 2014, "Edmund A. Boniface, Jr.: Inventing the Cockpit Sound Recorder" April 2, 2015, at the Wayback Machine
  • (Extraordinary), , U of A Engineer Magazine, Winter 2005
  • (Survivors), , NRC, 2008-03-05
  • Jeremy Sear, , University of Melbourne, October 2001
  • Siegel, Greg (2014). "Chapter 3. Black Boxes". Forensic Media: Reconstructing Accidents in Accelerated Modernity. Duke University Press. pp. 89–142. ISBN 978-0-8223-7623-1.
  • Wyatt, David; Mike Tooley (2009). "Chapter 18. Flight data and cockpit voice recorders". Aircraft Electrical and Electronic Systems. Routledge. p. 321. ISBN 978-1-136-44435-7.
  • Ben Hargreaves (April 13, 2017). "Flight Data Recorder Evolution: Where Next?". MRO-network. Aviation Week. Could flight data recorders evolve to be useful in preventative maintenance as well?.

External links edit

  Media related to Flight data recorders at Wikimedia Commons

  • Cockpit Voice Recorder Database
  • : Melbourne University history honors thesis on the development of the first cockpit voice recorder by David Warren
  • Finnish Mata-Hari Flight Recorder in Museums of Tampere City
  • "Beyond the Black Box: Instead of storing flight data on board, aircraft could easily send the information in real time to the ground", by Krishna M. Kavi, IEEE Spectrum, August 2010
  • . Archived from the original on February 11, 2009. Retrieved April 7, 2014.
  • , ABC TV (Australia)
  • , ABC TV (Australia)
  • etep, Flight Recorder designer
  • Heavy Vehicle EDR February 8, 2011, at the Wayback Machine information site for black box technology
  • How Black Boxes Work at HowStuffWorks
  • IRIG 106 Chapter 10: Flight data recorder digital recorder standard
  • US 3075192  James J. Ryan: "Coding Apparatus for Flight Recorders and the Like"
  • First modern flight recorder "Mata Hari" at display in Tampere Vapriikki Museum Centre.

  This article incorporates public domain material from websites or documents of the National Transportation Safety Board.

flight, recorder, flight, recorder, electronic, recording, device, placed, aircraft, purpose, facilitating, investigation, aviation, accidents, incidents, device, often, referred, colloquially, black, outdated, name, which, become, misnomer, they, required, pa. A flight recorder is an electronic recording device placed in an aircraft for the purpose of facilitating the investigation of aviation accidents and incidents The device may often be referred to colloquially as a black box an outdated name which has become a misnomer they are now required to be painted bright orange to aid in their recovery after accidents A modern flight data recorder the underwater locator beacon is the small cylinder on the far right Translation of warning message in French Flight recorder do not open The warning appears in English on the other side Cold War era Soviet MS 61 cockpit voice recorder from a MiG 21 interceptorThere are two types of flight recording devices the flight data recorder FDR preserves the recent history of the flight through the recording of dozens of parameters collected several times per second the cockpit voice recorder CVR preserves the recent history of the sounds in the cockpit including the conversation of the pilots The two devices may be combined into a single unit Together the FDR and CVR objectively document the aircraft s flight history which may assist in any later investigation The two flight recorders are required by international regulation overseen by the International Civil Aviation Organization to be capable of surviving the conditions likely to be encountered in a severe aircraft accident For this reason they are typically specified to withstand an impact of 3400 g and temperatures of over 1 000 C 1 830 F as required by EUROCAE ED 112 They have been a mandatory requirement in commercial aircraft in the United States since 1967 After the unexplained disappearance of Malaysia Airlines Flight 370 in 2014 commentators have called for live streaming of data to the ground as well as extending the battery life of the underwater locator beacons Contents 1 History 1 1 Early designs 1 2 Australian designs 1 3 US designs 2 Terminology 3 Components 3 1 Flight data recorder 3 2 Cockpit voice recorder 3 3 Combined units 3 4 Additional equipment 4 Specifications 5 Regulation 5 1 Proposed requirements 5 1 1 Deployable recorders 5 1 2 After Malaysia Airlines Flight 370 5 1 3 After Indonesia AirAsia Flight 8501 5 1 4 Boeing 737 MAX 5 1 5 Image recorders 6 Cultural references 7 See also 8 References 9 Further reading 10 External linksHistory edit nbsp A Fairchild A100 cockpit voice recorder on display in the Deutsches Museum This is a magnetic tape unit built to an old standard TSO C84 as shown on the nameplate The text on the side in French says Flight recorder do not open Early designs edit One of the earliest and proven attempts was made by Francois Hussenot and Paul Beaudouin in 1939 at the Marignane flight test center France with their type HB flight recorder they were essentially photograph based flight recorders because the record was made on a scrolling photographic film 8 metres 8 7 yd long by 88 millimetres 3 5 in wide The latent image was made by a thin ray of light deviated by a mirror tilted according to the magnitude of the data to be recorded altitude speed etc 1 A pre production run of 25 HB recorders was ordered in 1941 and HB recorders remained in use in French flight test centers well into the 1970s 2 3 In 1947 Hussenot founded the Societe Francaise des Instruments de Mesure with Beaudouin and another associate so as to market his invention which was also known as the hussenograph This company went on to become a major supplier of data recorders used not only aboard aircraft but also trains and other vehicles SFIM is today part of the Safran group and is still present in the flight recorder market The advantage of the film technology was that it could be easily developed afterwards and provides a durable visual feedback of the flight parameters without needing any playback device On the other hand unlike magnetic tapes or later flash memory based technology a photographic film cannot be erased and reused and so must be changed periodically The technology was reserved for one shot uses mostly during planned test flights it was not mounted aboard civilian aircraft during routine commercial flights Also cockpit conversation was not recorded Another form of flight data recorder was developed in the UK during World War II Len Harrison and Vic Husband developed a unit that could withstand a crash and fire to keep the flight data intact The unit was the forerunner of today s recorders in being able to withstand conditions that aircrew could not It used copper foil as the recording medium with various styli corresponding to various instruments or aircraft controls indenting the foil The foil was periodically advanced at set time intervals giving a history of the aircraft s instrument readings and control settings The unit was developed at Farnborough for the Ministry of Aircraft Production At the war s end the Ministry got Harrison and Husband to sign over their invention to it and the Ministry patented it under British patent 19330 45 The first modern flight data recorder called Mata Hari was created in 1942 by Finnish aviation engineer Veijo Hietala This black high tech mechanical box was able to record all important details during test flights of fighter aircraft that the Finnish army repaired or built in its main aviation factory in Tampere Finland 4 During World War II both British and American air forces successfully experimented with aircraft voice recorders 5 In August 1943 the USAAF conducted an experiment with a magnetic wire recorder to capture the inter phone conversations of a B 17 bomber flight crew on a combat mission over Nazi occupied France 6 The recording was broadcast back to the United States by radio two days afterwards Australian designs edit source source source track Video clip of 1985 ABC news report interviewing David Warren about his inventionIn 1953 while working at the Aeronautical Research Laboratories ARL of the Defence Science and Technology Organisation in Melbourne 7 Australian research scientist David Warren conceived a device that would record not only the instrument readings but also the voices in the cockpit 8 In 1954 he published a report entitled A Device for Assisting Investigation into Aircraft Accidents 9 Warren built a prototype FDR called The ARL Flight Memory Unit in 1956 9 and in 1958 he built the first combined FDR CVR prototype 8 10 It was designed with civilian aircraft in mind explicitly for post crash examination purposes 11 Aviation authorities from around the world were largely uninterested at first but this changed in 1958 when Sir Robert Hardingham the secretary of the British Air Registration Board visited the ARL and was introduced to David Warren 7 Hardingham realized the significance of the invention and arranged for Warren to demonstrate the prototype in the UK 9 The ARL assigned an engineering team to help Warren develop the prototype to the airborne stage The team consisting of electronics engineers Lane Sear Wally Boswell and Ken Fraser developed a working design that incorporated a fire resistant and shockproof case a reliable system for encoding and recording aircraft instrument readings and voice on one wire and a ground based decoding device The ARL system made by the British firm of S Davall amp Sons Ltd in Middlesex was named the Red Egg because of its shape and bright red color 9 The units were redesigned in 1965 and relocated at the rear of aircraft to increase the probability of successful data retrieval after a crash 12 Carriage of data recording equipment became mandatory in UK registered aircraft in two phases the first for new turbine engined public transport category aircraft over 12 000 lb 5 400 kg in weight was mandated in 1965 with a further requirement in 1966 for piston engined transports over 60 000 lb 27 000 kg with the earlier requirement further extended to all jet transports One of the first UK uses of the data recovered from an aircraft accident was that recovered from the Royston Midas data recorder that was on board the British Midland Argonaut involved in the Stockport Air Disaster in 1967 13 US designs edit nbsp NTSB investigators recover flight data recorder and cockpit voice recorder from UPS Airlines Flight 1354 nbsp NTSB staff examine the memory boards of the cockpit voice recorder from Atlas Air Flight 3591 The boards may have suffered water damageA flight recorder was invented and patented in the United States by Professor James J Crash Ryan a professor of mechanical engineering at the University of Minnesota from 1931 to 1963 Ryan s Flight Recorder patent was filed in August 1953 and approved on November 8 1960 as US Patent 2 959 459 14 A second patent by Ryan for a Coding Apparatus For Flight Recorders and the Like is US Patent 3 075 192 15 dated January 22 1963 An early prototype of the Ryan Flight Data Recorder is described in the January 2013 Aviation History article Father of the Black Box by Scott M Fisher 16 Ryan also the inventor of the retractable safety seat belt now required in automobiles began working on the idea of a flight recorder in 1946 and invented the device in response to a 1948 request from the Civil Aeronautics Board aimed at establishing operating procedures to reduce air mishaps The requirement was for a means of accumulating flight data The original device was known as the General Mills Flight Recorder The benefits of the flight recorder and the coding apparatus for flight recorders were outlined by Ryan in his study entitled Economies in Airline Operation with Flight Recorders which was entered into the Congressional Record in 1956 Ryan s flight recorder maintained a continuing recording of aircraft flight data such as engine exhaust temperature fuel flow aircraft velocity altitude control surfaces positions and rate of descent A Cockpit Sound Recorder CSR was independently invented and patented by Edmund A Boniface Jr an aeronautical engineer at Lockheed Aircraft Corporation 17 18 19 He originally filed with the US Patent Office on February 2 1961 as an Aircraft Cockpit Sound Recorder 20 The 1961 invention was viewed by some as an invasion of privacy Subsequently Boniface filed again on February 4 1963 for a Cockpit Sound Recorder US Patent 3 327 067 17 with the addition of a spring loaded switch which allowed the pilot to erase the audio sound tape recording at the conclusion of a safe flight and landing Boniface s participation in aircraft crash investigations in the 1940s 21 and in the accident investigations of the loss of one of the wings at cruise altitude on each of two Lockheed Electra turboprop powered aircraft Flight 542 operated by Braniff Airlines in 1959 and Flight 710 operated by Northwest Orient Airlines in 1961 led to his wondering what the pilots may have said just prior to the wing loss and during the descent as well as the type and nature of any sounds or explosions that may have preceded or occurred during the wing loss 22 His patent was for a device for recording audio of pilot remarks and engine or other sounds to be contained with the in flight recorder within a sealed container that is shock mounted fireproofed and made watertight and sealed in such a manner as to be capable of withstanding extreme temperatures during a crash fire The CSR was an analog device which provided a continuous erasing recording loop lasting 30 or more minutes of all sounds explosion voice and the noise of any aircraft structural components undergoing serious fracture and breakage which could be overheard in the cockpit 22 On November 1 1966 Bobbie R Allen director of Bureau of Safety Civil Aeronautics Board and John S Leak chief of Technical Services Section presented The Potential Role of Flight Recorders in Aircraft Accident Investigation at the AIAA CASI Joint Meeting on Aviation Safety Toronto Canada 23 Terminology edit nbsp GEE airborne equipment with the R1355 receiver on the left and the Indicator Unit Type 62A black box on the right The term black box was a World War II British phrase originating with the development of radio radar and electronic navigational aids in British and Allied combat aircraft These often secret electronic devices were encased in non reflective black boxes or housings The earliest identified reference to black boxes occurs in a May 1945 Flight article Radar for Airlines describing the application of wartime RAF radar and navigational aids to civilian aircraft The stowage of the black boxes and even more important the detrimental effect on performance of external aerials still remain as a radio and radar problem 24 The term black box is used with a different meaning in science and engineering describing a system exclusively by its inputs and outputs with no information whatsoever about its inner workings Magnetic tape and wire voice recorders had been tested on RAF and USAAF bombers by 1943 thus adding to the assemblage of fielded and experimental electronic devices employed on Allied aircraft As early as 1944 aviation writers envisioned use of these recording devices on commercial aircraft to aid incident investigations 25 When modern flight recorders were proposed to the British Aeronautical Research Council in 1958 the term black box was in colloquial use by experts 26 By 1967 when flight recorders were mandated by leading aviation countries the expression had found its way into general use These so called black boxes are in fact of fluorescent flame orange in colour 27 The formal names of the devices are flight data recorder and cockpit voice recorder The recorders must be housed in boxes that are bright orange in color to make them more visually conspicuous in the debris after an accident 28 Components editFlight data recorder edit Flight data recorder redirects here For the song by see Xs on Your Eyes nbsp A typical flight recorder nbsp Cockpit voice recorder and flight data recorder each with an underwater locator beacon on the front nbsp An underwater locator beacon the ballpoint pen provides scale nbsp A cockpit voice and data recorder CVDR with its attached ULB visible on the left side of the unit nbsp A flight data recorder and a cockpit voice recorder installed on their mounting trays in the rear fuselage of an aircraft nbsp The flight data recorder for crashed flight MU5735 A flight data recorder FDR also ADR for accident data recorder is an electronic device employed to record instructions sent to any electronic systems on an aircraft The data recorded by the FDR are used for accident and incident investigation Due to their importance in investigating accidents these ICAO regulated devices are carefully engineered and constructed to withstand the force of a high speed impact and the heat of an intense fire Contrary to the popular term black box the exterior of the FDR is coated with heat resistant bright orange paint for high visibility in wreckage and the unit is usually mounted in the aircraft s tail section where it is more likely to survive a crash Following an accident the recovery of the FDR is usually a high priority for the investigating body as analysis of the recorded parameters can often detect and identify causes or contributing factors 29 Modern day FDRs receive inputs via specific data frames from the flight data acquisition units They record significant flight parameters including the control and actuator positions engine information and time of day There are 88 parameters required as a minimum under current US federal regulations only 29 were required until 2002 but some systems monitor many more variables Generally each parameter is recorded a few times per second though some units store bursts of data at a much higher frequency if the data begin to change quickly Most FDRs record approximately 17 25 hours of data in a continuous loop citation needed It is required by regulations that an FDR verification check readout is performed annually in order to verify that all mandatory parameters are recorded citation needed Many aircraft today are equipped with an event button in the cockpit that could be activated by the crew if an abnormality occurs in flight Pushing the button places a signal on the recording marking the time of the event 30 Modern FDRs are typically double wrapped in strong corrosion resistant stainless steel or titanium with high temperature insulation inside Modern FDRs are accompanied by an underwater locator beacon that emits an ultrasonic ping to aid in detection when submerged These beacons operate for up to 30 days and are able to operate while immersed to a depth of up to 6 000 meters 20 000 ft 31 32 Cockpit voice recorder edit nbsp Both side views of a cockpit voice recorder one type of flight recorderA cockpit voice recorder CVR is a flight recorder used to record the audio environment in the flight deck of an aircraft for the purpose of investigation of accidents and incidents This is typically achieved by recording the signals of the microphones and earphones of the pilots headsets and of an area microphone in the roof of the cockpit The current applicable FAA TSO is C123b titled Cockpit Voice Recorder Equipment 33 Where an aircraft is required to carry a CVR and uses digital communications the CVR is required to record such communications with air traffic control unless this is recorded elsewhere As of 2008 update it is an FAA requirement that the recording duration is a minimum of two hours 34 The European Aviation Safety Agency increased the recording duration to 25 hours in 2021 35 In 2023 the FAA proposed extending requirements to 25 hours to help in investigations like runway incursions 36 37 A standard CVR is capable of recording four channels of audio data for a period of two hours The original requirement was for a CVR to record for 30 minutes but this has been found to be insufficient in many cases because significant parts of the audio data needed for a subsequent investigation occurred more than 30 minutes before the end of the recording 38 The earliest CVRs used analog wire recording later replaced by analog magnetic tape Some of the tape units used two reels with the tape automatically reversing at each end The original was the ARL Flight Memory Unit produced in 1957 by Australian David Warren and instrument maker Tych Mirfield 39 40 Other units used a single reel with the tape spliced into a continuous loop much as in an 8 track cartridge The tape would circulate and old audio information would be overwritten every 30 minutes Recovery of sound from magnetic tape often proves difficult if the recorder is recovered from water and its housing has been breached Thus the latest designs employ solid state memory and use fault tolerant digital recording techniques making them much more resistant to shock vibration and moisture With the reduced power requirements of solid state recorders it is now practical to incorporate a battery in the units so that recording can continue until flight termination even if the aircraft electrical system fails Like the FDR the CVR is typically mounted in the rear of the airplane fuselage to maximize the likelihood of its survival in a crash 41 Combined units edit With the advent of digital recorders the FDR and CVR can be manufactured in one fireproof shock proof and waterproof container as a combined digital cockpit voice and data recorder CVDR Currently CVDRs are manufactured by L3Harris Technologies 42 and Hensoldt 43 among others Solid state recorders became commercially practical in 1990 having the advantage of not requiring scheduled maintenance and making the data easier to retrieve This was extended to the two hour voice recording in 1995 44 Additional equipment edit Since the 1970s most large civil jet transports have been additionally equipped with a quick access recorder QAR This records data on a removable storage medium Access to the FDR and CVR is necessarily difficult because they must be fitted where they are most likely to survive an accident they also require specialized equipment to read the recording The QAR recording medium is readily removable and is designed to be read by equipment attached to a standard desktop computer In many airlines the quick access recordings are scanned for events an event being a significant deviation from normal operational parameters This allows operational problems to be detected and eliminated before an accident or incident results A flight data acquisition unit FDAU is a unit that receives various discrete analog and digital parameters from a number of sensors and avionic systems and then routes them to the FDR and if installed to the QAR Information from the FDAU to the FDR is sent via specific data frames which depend on the aircraft manufacturer Many modern aircraft systems are digital or digitally controlled Very often the digital system will include built in test equipment which records information about the operation of the system This information may also be accessed to assist with the investigation of an accident or incident Specifications edit nbsp Cockpit voice recorder memory module of PR GTD a Gol Transportes Aereos Boeing 737 8EH SFP found in the Amazon in Mato Grosso Brazil nbsp After the crash of Gol Transportes Aereos Flight 1907 Brazilian Air Force personnel show the recovered flight data recorderThe design of today s FDR is governed by the internationally recognized standards and recommended practices relating to flight recorders which are contained in ICAO Annex 6 which makes reference to industry crashworthiness and fire protection specifications such as those to be found in the European Organisation for Civil Aviation Equipment 45 documents EUROCAE ED55 ED56 Fiken A and ED112 Minimum Operational Performance Specification for Crash Protected Airborne Recorder Systems In the United States the Federal Aviation Administration FAA regulates all aspects of US aviation and cites design requirements in their Technical Standard Order 46 based on the EUROCAE documents as do the aviation authorities of many other countries Currently EUROCAE specifies that a recorder must be able to withstand an acceleration of 3400 g 33 km s2 for 6 5 milliseconds This is roughly equivalent to an impact velocity of 270 knots 310 mph 500 km h and a deceleration or crushing distance of 45 cm 18 in 47 Additionally there are requirements for penetration resistance static crush high and low temperature fires deep sea pressure sea water immersion and fluid immersion EUROCAE ED 112 Minimum Operational Performance Specification for Crash Protected Airborne Recorder Systems defines the minimum specification to be met for all aircraft requiring flight recorders for recording of flight data cockpit audio images and CNS ATM digital messages and used for investigations of accidents or incidents 48 When issued in March 2003 ED 112 superseded previous ED 55 and ED 56A that were separate specifications for FDR and CVR FAA TSOs for FDR and CVR reference ED 112 for characteristics common to both types In order to facilitate recovery of the recorder from an aircraft accident site they are required to be coloured bright yellow or orange with reflective surfaces All are lettered Flight recorder do not open on one side in English and Enregistreur de vol ne pas ouvrir in French on the other side To assist recovery from submerged sites they must be equipped with an underwater locator beacon which is automatically activated in the event of an accident nbsp Regulation editIn the investigation of the 1960 crash of Trans Australia Airlines Flight 538 at Mackay Queensland the inquiry judge strongly recommended that flight recorders be installed in all Australian airliners Australia became the first country in the world to make cockpit voice recording compulsory 49 50 nbsp The digital flight data recorder from West Air Sweden Flight 294 All data was collected even though the rest of the aircraft was heavily fragmentedThe United States first CVR rules were passed in 1964 requiring all turbine and piston aircraft with four or more engines to have CVRs by March 1 1967 51 As of 2008 update it is an FAA requirement that the CVR recording duration is a minimum of two hours 34 following the NTSB recommendation that it should be increased from its previously mandated 30 minute duration 52 From 2014 the United States requires flight data recorders and cockpit voice recorders on aircraft that have 20 or more passenger seats or those that have six or more passenger seats are turbine powered and require two pilots 53 For US air carriers and manufacturers the National Transportation Safety Board NTSB is responsible for investigating accidents and safety related incidents The NTSB also serves in an advisory role for many international investigations not under its formal jurisdiction The NTSB does not have regulatory authority but must depend on legislation and other government agencies to act on its safety recommendations 54 In addition 49 USC Section 1114 c prohibits the NTSB from making the audio recordings public except by written transcript 55 The ARINC Standards are prepared by the Airlines Electronic Engineering Committee AEEC The 700 Series of standards describe the form fit and function of avionics equipment installed predominately on transport category aircraft The FDR is defined by ARINC Characteristic 747 The CVR is defined by ARINC Characteristic 757 56 Proposed requirements edit Deployable recorders edit The NTSB recommended in 1999 that operators be required to install two sets of CVDR systems with the second CVDR set being deployable or ejectable The deployable recorder combines the cockpit voice flight data recorders and an emergency locator transmitter ELT in a single unit The deployable unit would depart the aircraft before impact activated by sensors The unit is designed to eject and fly away from the crash site to survive the terminal velocity of fall to float on water indefinitely and would be equipped with satellite technology for immediate location of crash impact site The deployable CVDR technology has been used by the US Navy since 1993 57 While the recommendations would involve a massive expensive retrofit program government funding would meet cost objections from manufacturers and airlines Operators would get both sets of recorders including the currently used fixed recorder free of charge The cost of the second deployable ejectable CVDR or black box was estimated at US 30 million for installation in 500 new aircraft about 60 000 per new commercial plane citation needed In the United States the proposed SAFE Act calls for implementing the NTSB 1999 recommendations However so far the SAFE Act legislation has failed to pass Congress having been introduced in 2003 H R 2632 in 2005 H R 3336 and in 2007 H R 4336 58 Originally the Safe Aviation Flight Enhancement SAFE Act of 2003 59 was introduced on June 26 2003 by Congressman David Price D NC and Congressman John Duncan R Tenn in a bipartisan effort to ensure investigators have access to information immediately following commercial accidents 57 On July 19 2005 a revised SAFE Act was introduced and referred to the Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure of the US House of Representatives The bill was referred to the House Subcommittee on Aviation during the 108th 109th and 110th Congresses 60 61 62 After Malaysia Airlines Flight 370 edit In the United States on March 12 2014 in response to the missing Malaysia Airlines Flight 370 David Price re introduced the SAFE Act in the US House of Representatives 63 The disappearance of Malaysia Airlines Flight 370 demonstrated the limits of the contemporary flight recorder technology namely how physical possession of the flight recorder device is necessary to help investigate the cause of an aircraft incident Considering the advances of modern communication technology commentators called for flight recorders to be supplemented or replaced by a system that provides live streaming of data from the aircraft to the ground 64 65 66 Furthermore commentators called for the underwater locator beacon s range and battery life to be extended as well as the outfitting of civil aircraft with the deployable flight recorders typically used in military aircraft Previous to MH370 the investigators of 2009 Air France Flight 447 urged that the battery life be extended as rapidly as possible after the crash s flight recorders went unrecovered for over a year 67 After Indonesia AirAsia Flight 8501 edit On December 28 2014 Indonesia AirAsia Flight 8501 en route from Surabaya Indonesia to Singapore crashed in bad weather killing all 155 passengers and seven crew on board 68 On January 8 2015 before the recovery of the flight recorders an anonymous ICAO representative said The time has come that deployable recorders are going to get a serious look 69 A second ICAO official said that public attention had galvanized momentum in favour of ejectable recorders on commercial aircraft 69 Boeing 737 MAX edit Live flight data streaming as on the Boeing 777F ecoDemonstrator plus 20 minutes of data before and after a triggering event could have removed the uncertainty before the Boeing 737 MAX groundings following the March 2019 Ethiopian Airlines Flight 302 crash 70 Image recorders edit The NTSB has asked for the installation of cockpit image recorders in large transport aircraft to provide information that would supplement existing CVR and FDR data in accident investigations They have recommended that image recorders be placed into smaller aircraft that are not required to have a CVR or FDR 71 The rationale is that what is seen on an instrument by the pilots of an aircraft is not necessarily the same as the data sent to the display device This is particularly true of aircraft equipped with electronic displays CRT or LCD A mechanical instrument panel is likely to preserve its last indications but this is not the case with an electronic display Such systems estimated to cost less than 8 000 installed typically consist of a camera and microphone located in the cockpit to continuously record cockpit instrumentation the outside viewing area engine sounds radio communications and ambient cockpit sounds As with conventional CVRs and FDRs data from such a system is stored in a crash protected unit to ensure survivability 71 better source needed Since the recorders can sometimes be crushed into unreadable pieces or even located in deep water some modern units are self ejecting taking advantage of kinetic energy at impact to separate themselves from the aircraft and also equipped with radio emergency locator transmitters and sonar underwater locator beacons to aid in their location 72 Cultural references editThis section appears to contain trivial minor or unrelated references to popular culture Please reorganize this content to explain the subject s impact on popular culture providing citations to reliable secondary sources rather than simply listing appearances Unsourced material may be challenged and removed March 2022 The artwork for the band Rammstein s album Reise Reise is made to look like a CVR it also includes a recording from a crash The recording is from the last 1 2 minutes of the CVR of Japan Airlines Flight 123 which crashed on August 12 1985 killing 520 people JAL123 is the deadliest single aircraft disaster in history 73 Members of the performing arts collective Collective Unconscious made a theatrical presentation of a play called Charlie Victor Romeo with a script based on transcripts from CVR voice recordings of nine aircraft emergencies The play features the famous United Airlines Flight 232 that crash landed in a cornfield near Sioux City Iowa after suffering a catastrophic failure of one engine and most flight controls 74 Survivor a novel by American author Chuck Palahniuk is about a cult member who dictates his life story to a flight recorder before the plane runs out of fuel and crashes 75 In stand up comedy many jokes have been made asking why the entire airplane isn t made out of the material used to make black boxes given that the black box survives the crash This is referenced in the 2001 Chris Rock movie Down to Earth 76 although the original joke is widely credited to George Carlin 77 See also edit nbsp Aviation portalAcronyms and abbreviations in avionics Data logger Emergency locator beacon Emergency position indicating radiobeacon station Event data recorder Flight operations quality assurance Korean Air Lines Flight 007 List of unrecovered and unusable flight recorders Quick access recorder Software flight recorder Train event recorder Voyage data recorderReferences edit Jean Claude Fayer Vols d essais Le Centre d Essais en Vol de 1945 a 1960 published by E T A I Paris 2001 384 pages ISBN 2 7268 8534 9 Page 206 and 209 of Beaudouin amp Beaudouin Black Box History May 22 2020 archived from the original on January 25 2022 retrieved May 22 2020 Mata Hari or Black Box Museums of Tampere in Finnish 1946 Archived from the original on October 19 2017 Retrieved October 19 2017 Chuck Owl February 4 2015 Audio From the Past E01 WW2 Avro Lancaster Crew Radio archived from the original on November 16 2018 retrieved February 13 2019 Porter Kenneth January 1944 Radio News Radio On a Flying Fortress PDF www americanradiohistory com p 21 Archived PDF from the original on January 25 2022 Retrieved February 13 2019 a b Dave Warren Inventor of the black box flight recorder Defence Science and Technology Organisation Archived from the original on July 6 2011 a b Australia invented the Black Box voice and instrument recorder apc online com February 9 2000 Archived from the original on July 7 2011 Retrieved March 11 2014 a b c d Marcus Williamson July 31 2010 David Warren Inventor and developer of the black box flight data recorder The Independent Archived from the original on May 30 2020 Retrieved September 5 2018 A Brief History of Black Boxes Time July 20 2009 p 22 A Brief History of Black Boxes Time July 20 2009 p 22 Archived from the original on February 3 2012 Retrieved February 1 2012 Tony Bailey January 2006 Flight Data Recorders Built to Survive PDF aea net Avionics News p 38 Archived PDF from the original on December 10 2019 Retrieved September 5 2018 1967 1315 Flight Archive Archived from the original on February 14 2019 US Patent 2 959 459 for Flight Recorder by James J Ryan Archived from the original on January 8 2016 Retrieved March 25 2014 US Patent 3 075 192 for Coding Apparatus for Flight Recorders by James J Ryan Archived from the original on January 8 2016 Retrieved January 7 2014 Fisher Scott M January 2013 Father of the Black Box Aviation History Retrieved January 31 2022 a b Cockpit Sound Recorder Google Patents Google Inc Archived from the original on April 28 2016 Retrieved December 31 2013 Airplane Black Box Flight Recorder Technology How it Works Archived October 11 2016 at the Wayback Machine Slyck News March 13 2014 Why Are Cockpit Voice Recorders Painted Orange and Called a Black Box Archived September 17 2016 at the Wayback Machine Guardian Liberty Voice By Jerry Nelson on March 8 2014 AAHS Journal Vol 59 Nos 3 4 Fall Win www aahs online org Archived from the original on September 3 2021 Retrieved September 3 2021 The Flight Data Recorder Archived October 11 2016 at the Wayback Machine Aviation Digest May 11 2015 page 58 a b US Patent 3 327 067 for Cockpit Sound Recorder by Edmund A Boniface Jr Archived July 7 2017 at the Wayback Machine Allen B R Leak John S 1966 The potential role of flight recorders in aircraft accident investigation Aviation Safety Meeting BOSP 7 4 U S Civil Aeronautics Board doi 10 2514 6 1966 810 Flight Radar for Airlines Flight May 2 1945 p 434 Archived from the original on February 14 2019 Retrieved February 13 2019 Corddry Charles Jr August 1944 Flying Aerial Eavesdropper p 150 Archived from the original on January 25 2022 Retrieved October 17 2020 1 Archived January 24 2014 at the Wayback Machine Scott Geoffrey December 14 1967 Flight Saving the Record www flightglobal com p 1002 Archived from the original on February 14 2019 Retrieved February 13 2019 France to resume black box hunt BBC News December 13 2009 Archived from the original on January 25 2022 Retrieved April 30 2010 Flight Data Recorder Systems PDF Federal Aviation Administration April 10 2007 Section 3 Point B Archived PDF from the original on September 13 2009 Retrieved April 8 2010 Aircraft Electronics Electrical Systems Flight data and cockpit voice recorders industrial electronics com A Measurement Testing network Archived from the original on November 11 2018 Retrieved March 27 2019 FLIGHT DATA RECORDER OSA TM 1 1510 225 10 280 aviationandaccessories tpub com Archived from the original on December 10 2018 Retrieved August 29 2021 SSFDR Solid State Flight Data Recorder ARINC 747 TSO C 124 ED 55 PDF Archived from the original PDF on November 8 2012 Cockpit Voice Recorder Equipment PDF Federal Aviation Administration June 1 2006 Archived PDF from the original on October 26 2007 Retrieved April 21 2007 a b Federal Aviation Regulation Sec 121 359 h i 2 amendment 338 and greater Cockpit voice recorders Risingup com Archived from the original on February 6 2012 Retrieved February 7 2013 Bellamy III Woodrow April 13 2019 L3 Has New Data Voice Recorders for EASA s 2021 Mandate Avionics International Retrieved June 19 2023 Walsh Amelia March 21 2023 FAA Proposes Extending Cockpit Voice Recording to 25 Hours FLYING Magazine Retrieved June 19 2023 Wallace Greg March 17 2023 The FAA proposes lengthening cockpit voice recording time to 25 hours CBS Sacramento www cbsnews com Retrieved June 19 2023 Tracy Connor October 28 1999 Learjet probe focuses on value replaced 2 days before crash The New York Post p 18 The record works on a half hour loop so it has no information about the crucial first hour ARL Flight Memory Recorder Museums Victoria Collections Archived from the original on October 5 2021 Retrieved October 5 2021 Mirfield Theon Neuma May 1964 Miniature wire recording desks with limited memory The Australian Journal of Instrument Technology May 94 100 Archived from the original on October 20 2019 Retrieved October 20 2019 Federal Aviation Regulation Sec 23 1457 Cockpit voice recorders Risingup com Archived from the original on February 10 2012 Retrieved February 7 2013 L 3 Aviation Recorders l 3ar com Archived from the original on July 27 2014 Retrieved July 23 2014 Flight and mission data recording amp management SferiRec Hensoldt 2019 Archived from the original on August 12 2019 Retrieved August 12 2019 History of Flight Recorders L3 Flight Recorders Archived from the original on December 11 2013 Luftfahrt European Organisation for Civil Aviation Equipment Eurocae net Archived from the original on January 9 2014 Retrieved March 11 2014 TSO C124a FAA Regs Airweb faa gov May 23 2006 Archived from the original on January 8 2016 Retrieved March 11 2014 Black box flight recorders ATSB April 1 2014 Archived from the original on October 9 2016 Retrieved October 7 2016 2 Archived August 11 2007 at the Wayback Machine Dave Warren Inventor of the black box flight recorder Defence Science and Technology Organisation March 29 2005 Archived from the original on May 22 2010 Retrieved April 20 2010 Campbell Neil The Evolution of Flight Data Analysis PDF Proc Australian Society of Air Safety Investigators conference 2007 Archived PDF from the original on February 4 2016 Retrieved April 7 2014 Nick Komos August 1989 Air Progress 76 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help 2011 Most Wanted List Page Recorders NTSB Archived August 4 2014 at the Wayback Machine U S Code of Federal Regulations April 25 2010 14 CFR 91 609 Legal Information Institute Cornell Law School Archived from the original on August 9 2016 Retrieved June 17 2016 History of the NTSB NTSB Official Site Archived from the original on May 12 2016 Retrieved June 17 2016 CVR Handbook PDF www ntsb gov Archived PDF from the original on September 3 2020 Retrieved June 29 2020 ARINC Store 700 series Archived from the original on August 14 2011 Retrieved November 12 2015 a b Aviation Today aviationtoday com Archived from the original on March 25 2014 Safe Aviation and Flight Enhancement Act of 2005 2005 109th Congress H R 3336 GovTrack us GovTrack us Archived from the original on March 22 2014 Retrieved April 7 2014 Text of the Safe Aviation and Flight Enhancement Act SAFE Act of 2003 Archived from the original on September 25 2015 Retrieved August 2 2015 via govtrack us Bill Text 108th Congress 2003 2004 THOMAS Library of Congress Thomas loc gov Archived from the original on January 8 2016 Retrieved March 11 2014 Bill Text 109th Congress 2005 2006 THOMAS Library of Congress Thomas loc gov Archived from the original on January 8 2016 Retrieved March 11 2014 Bill Text 110th Congress 2007 2008 THOMAS Library of Congress Thomas loc gov Archived from the original on January 8 2016 Retrieved March 11 2014 Jansen Bart Lawmaker urges black boxes that eject from planes USA Today Archived from the original on July 10 2017 Retrieved August 26 2017 Malaysia Airlines flight MH370 makes it clear we need to rethink black boxes Stephen Trimble Comment is free theguardian com Archived from the original on March 30 2014 Retrieved March 31 2014 Malaysia Airlines MH370 Why airlines don t live stream black box data Technology amp Science CBC News August 4 2005 Archived from the original on March 30 2014 Retrieved March 31 2014 Yu Yijun If we d used the cloud we might know where MH370 is now Archived July 24 2014 at the Wayback Machine The Conversation London March 18 2014 Retrieved on August 21 2014 MH370 Expert demands better black box technology The Sydney Morning Herald April 28 2014 Archived from the original on April 28 2014 Retrieved April 28 2014 AirAsia QZ8501 More bad weather hits AirAsia search BBC News January 1 2015 Archived from the original on August 15 2018 Retrieved June 21 2018 a b Lampert Allison Martell Allison January 8 2015 AirAsia crash makes case for ejectable black boxes Reuters Archived from the original on October 12 2019 Retrieved January 5 2021 a href Template Cite news html title Template Cite news cite news a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Opinion The Time Is Ripe for Live Flight Data Streaming Aviation Week amp Space Technology March 22 2019 Archived from the original on January 25 2022 Retrieved March 22 2019 a b NTSB Most Wanted Ntsb gov Archived from the original on November 3 2013 Retrieved March 11 2014 These Black Boxes Are Designed to Eject Themselves in a Plane Crash Travel Leisure Archived from the original on October 5 2021 Retrieved October 5 2021 Beckner Justin The Easter Egg Hidden on Rammstein s Reise Reise Album UltimateGuitar Retrieved July 17 2023 Collective Unconscious Charlievictorromeo com July 3 2012 Archived from the original on May 17 2014 Retrieved February 7 2013 Survivor Summary amp Study Guide Retrieved July 17 2023 via Bookrags Down to Earth Movie Script Scripts com Retrieved July 17 2023 Quote by George Carlin Goodreads Retrieved July 17 2023 Further reading editAmerican Aviation Historical Society Volume 59 Fall Winter 2014 Edmund A Boniface Jr Inventing the Cockpit Sound Recorder Archived April 2 2015 at the Wayback Machine Extraordinary Extraordinary Inventor U of A Engineer Magazine Winter 2005 Survivors Saving Survivors by Finding Fallen Aircrafts sic NRC 2008 03 05 Jeremy Sear The ARL Black Box Flight Recorder University of Melbourne October 2001 Siegel Greg 2014 Chapter 3 Black Boxes Forensic Media Reconstructing Accidents in Accelerated Modernity Duke University Press pp 89 142 ISBN 978 0 8223 7623 1 Wyatt David Mike Tooley 2009 Chapter 18 Flight data and cockpit voice recorders Aircraft Electrical and Electronic Systems Routledge p 321 ISBN 978 1 136 44435 7 Ben Hargreaves April 13 2017 Flight Data Recorder Evolution Where Next MRO network Aviation Week Could flight data recorders evolve to be useful in preventative maintenance as well External links edit nbsp Media related to Flight data recorders at Wikimedia Commons Cockpit Voice Recorder Database The ARL Black Box Flight Recorder Melbourne University history honors thesis on the development of the first cockpit voice recorder by David Warren Finnish Mata Hari Flight Recorder in Museums of Tampere City Beyond the Black Box Instead of storing flight data on board aircraft could easily send the information in real time to the ground by Krishna M Kavi IEEE Spectrum August 2010 A crash course in transportation safety Archived from the original on February 11 2009 Retrieved April 7 2014 David Warren interview transcript 2002 ABC TV Australia David Warren interview transcript 2003 ABC TV Australia etep Flight Recorder designer Heavy Vehicle EDR Archived February 8 2011 at the Wayback Machine information site for black box technology How Black Boxes Work at HowStuffWorks IRIG 106 Chapter 10 Flight data recorder digital recorder standard Public domain photos of recorders Popular Mechanics March 19 2008 His Crashes Helped Make Ours Less Dangerous US 3075192 James J Ryan Coding Apparatus for Flight Recorders and the Like First modern flight recorder Mata Hari at display in Tampere Vapriikki Museum Centre nbsp This article incorporates public domain material from websites or documents of the National Transportation Safety Board Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Flight recorder amp oldid 1174223935, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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