Sunday, August 9, 2020

Calicut crash: Black box found, DGCA probe on

Calicut crash: Black box found, DGCA probe on

Cockpit Voice Recorder Also Sent To Delhi

AnanthaNarayanan.K@timesgroup.com

09.08.2020

The civil aviation ministry’s Aircraft Accident Investigation Bureau (AAIB) retrieved on Saturday the digital flight data recorder (DFDR), known as a black box, and the cockpit voice recorder from the wreckage of Air India Express Dubai-Kozhikode Flight IX 1344.

Eighteen people, including the pilot and co-pilot, were killed when the aircraft, trying to land in torrential rain on Friday night, overshot the tabletop runway at Kozhikode and plunged about 35 feet into a valley.

The investigating team retrieved the black box and cockpit voice recorder after cutting into the floorboard of the cockpit. These devices, considered the most important evidence in determining the reasons leading to an air crash, were sent to Delhi for decoding and analysis.

Officials of the AAIB, Directorate General of Civil Aviation (DGCA) and the flight safety department of Air India Express from Delhi reached the crash site on Saturday morning. A DGCA team from Chennai, too, arrived in Kozhikode. The investigators, who visited the ATC and held meetings with different agencies at the airport, refused to comment on the accident.

A senior official associated with the probe said it was too early to say whether the accident was the result of a technical fault or human error. “All crashes are caused by multiple contributory factors and here preliminary info shows wrong landing due to bad weather as a reason. The about 8,000-foot-long runway of the airport is sufficient for a Boeing 737 to land but it is learnt that the aircraft landed 3,000 feet off. What exactly happened will be clear only after checking the flight history and ATC-pilot communications,” the official said.

Aviation experts visualised various scenarios about what may have led to the accident, ranging from hydroplaning (total loss of friction between the wheels and runway surface due to the formation of a layer of water on the ground) to “optical illusions” created by tabletop runways that can distort the flight profile.



Officials inspect the remains of the plane at Kozhikode airport; (below right) the grieving wife of a passenger who died in the crash

Pilot’s wife pregnant, not told about death

The family of co-pilot Akhilesh Kumar, who died hours after the crash at Kozhikode on Friday, had been preparing for his homecoming when they got the news — his wife is due for delivery in less than a month and does not know till now she has lost her husband. P 11

24-year-old returning to get married, dies

Muhammed Riyas was to begin a new chapter. The 24-year-old from a small Palakkad village working in Dubai was to get married in September, but died on Friday night. The wedding, slated for July 14, had been postponed due to the pandemic.P 11

Seat change, unpaid fines proved lucky

A woman with a two-year-old girl who swapped a seat right in the front for one well at the back as she wanted to sit with a friend, two others who missed the flight at Dubai because they didn’t have the money to pay a fine for expired visas — there were a few who had a lucky escape. P 11

Experts: Change in runway was pilot’s decision or ATC’s suggestion

Experts also pointed out that the last-minute change in choice of runway and subsequent wind direction was the pilot’s decision or ATC’s suggestion. There were unconfirmed reports of trouble with the landing gear of the aircraft, but, if that was the case, this was not communicated to the ATC. “The inquiry report should find out all aspects, like weather, wind factor, poor visibility, miscommunication with ATC if any, etc.,” said Bharat Bhushan, former DGCA chief.

The report of the two-yearlong investigation into the Mangaluru air crash in 2010, which killed 158 people when an AIE Boeing 737 careened off the tabletop runway, had suggested various measures, including an arrester bed, for tabletop runways. An “Engineered Materials Arresting System”, or EMAS, can reduce the severity of a “runway excursion”, but the Kozhikode airport still doesn’t have such a system.

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