âTower, look at to the south, there's an aircraft crashingâ On Veteransâ Day in 2001, an airplane carrying 260 people dropped out of the sky shortly
after taking off from JFK. âAn aircraft just crashed to the south of
the fieldâ The top fin of the plane broke off and fell
into Jamaica Bay, and the rest of the plane crashed into a residential
neighborhood in Queens. Everyone onboard and 5 people on the ground were killed.
This was just 2 months after September 11th, and it was reasonable to assume, as many people did,
that New York was being attacked again. But investigators concluded that it wasnât
terrorism that took down Flight 587. And they knew that because of what they found
on the airplaneâs black box. What the press calls the âblack boxâ is
actually 2 orange flight recorders. The idea dates back to the 1950s, when the
first commercial jet had 5 accidents in its first 2 years of passenger service,
and investigators realized how useful it would be to have a record of what was happening
on the plane before the crash. Early generations of flight recorders etched
the data onto metal foil. By the 1970s theyâd switched to magnetic
tape, and by the 90s, solid-state memory chips. But overall, the concept has remained basically
the same, with 2 components: The cockpit voice recorder stores the last
2 hours of sound from cockpit and from the pilotsâ headset microphones, on 4 different
channels. In some cases, these audio recordings alone
can reveal what happened, as they did when a Germanwings flight crashed into the French
Alps in 2015. NBC report: âThe plane begins to descend.
Air Traffic control calls. No answer. The captain begins banging on the door, yelling,
âFor God's sake, open the door.â Passengers scream in the background.â
In the case of Flight 587, that's the plane that crashed into those houses in Queens -- the
cockpit voice recorder offered some hints about what happened.
The transcript showed that before crashing, the plane ran into some wake turbulence from the large 747 that took off just ahead of Flight 587.
But that turbulence alone wouldnât have been enough to take down the flight.
So investigators needed information from the second box: the flight data recorder. It captures
at least 88 types of data about the planeâs position and instruments for the past 25 hours.
That data feeds into computer animations of what happened before the recorder lost power. And the black box data revealed that the pilots lost control of the plane over the course
of about 10 seconds. And this line in particular stuck out -- it
shows what the copilot, who was flying the plane, was doing with the rudder pedals in
response to the turbulence. Pilots can maneuver planes along 3 axes, pitch,
roll, and yaw, which is what the rudder controls. But they rarely use the rudder, because as youâve
probably noticed, they can change direction by rolling. Investigators concluded that the copilot probably didnât realize that his aggressive rudder pedal
movements were making things worse, that they were putting enough pressure on the
the vertical stabilizer, that it detached causing the plane to crash.
Because of the flight data recorder, authorities could rule out both terrorism and mechanical
failure, and instead, blame pilot error and poor training. No two airplane accidents are the same, but the flight recorders are useful for every
case, provided that they survive the crash. And they usually do. The recorders are installed
near the tail of planes where the force of the impact is somewhat lessened.
And the memory boards are kept in steel or titanium cases and surrounded by materials
that protect against high temperatures. Often, the rest of the box will be destroyed,
but that doesnât matter as long as the memory unit is intact.
Of course, flight recorders that are never found are useless.
They do have a beacon that activates underwater and sends an ultrasound signal every second
for 30 days. That signal can travel through 14,000 feet of water. But as flight MH 370 showed, sometimes investigators
arenât even within that range. BBC report: "But the batteries from MH 370 black boxes are almost certainly starting to fail. If they haven't already." Thatâs why some have proposed new systems
that donât leave the data on the plane, but rather transmit it in real time to
satellites or ground stations. There are privacy and cost concerns to consider,
but in the future, they might not need to find a box, in order to find the answers the that investigators, and families need. Why does the press call it a black box when it's orange? Very good question. The term "black box" is not actually used within the aviation industry. I was told when I originally came here there were a couple of different theories. One, that the term black box is often used in engineering for a device where you have a lot of inputs. It may go back to the early days of the recorder, where they used light-sensitive paper to record traces from the stylus. And that equipment was housed in a light-protected black box. There's also the idea that, as a result of the accident, once they've been expose to heat and fire, that they turn black or a dark brown. Nobody really knows where the term came from. But as I say, they're more appropriately called flight recorders or onboard recording devices and they're always painted a very bright orange.
And to add to this, its an old FDR but still interesting to see how they were arranged.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xlY5W7be5jU
I donât like how they used AA587 as an example. They could tell without the black boxes that it wasnât a terrorist attack when they found the vertical stabilizer in Jamaica Bay. A better example would have been the Tenerife Disaster.