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Air Asia flight bound for Singapore lost contact with air traffic

zeroo

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OMG! AirAsia flight QZ8501 pilot final words were “Allahuakhbar” repeatedly

http://www.malaysiandigest.com/news...s.html?utm_source=dlvr.it&utm_medium=facebook


KUALA LUMPUR: Despite being an investigator for almost two decades, analysing the Indonesia AirAsia flight QZ8501 will be one of the toughest challenging for Nurcahyo Utomo, who knew the pilot personally.

The National Transportation Safety Committee investigator, Nurchayo said listening to recording from black boxes over and over again can be disturbing and requires utmost mental strength.

“Listening to the playback of a black box involved in a crash is not like listening to music or a discussion.

“We are listening to a recording that represents the last moments before the crash and it is disturbing. There are times where the investigators would get unnerved listening to the recording,” he told Viva.co.id.

Analysing the recording while listening to their final words like “Allahuakhbar” repeatedly, give the investigators goose bumps, Nurcahyo said.

“It is as if we can feel them... Allahuakhbar, Allahuakhbar were the last words said before they died.

“Despite the heavy heart we could not escape from the task. Hearing to the last conversation would be the key to reveal the cause of the AirAsia crash.

"We will know what really happened from the conversations between pilot and co-pilot prior to the crash," he said.

The task of analysing the black boxes would be harder for Nurcahyo who was a junior to the pilot, Captain Iriyanto.

“Indriyanto was my senior and he is the one who taught me how to fly.

“I could not imagine how am I going to listen to his last words,” he said.
 

Domino

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Re: OMG! AirAsia flight QZ8501 pilot final words were “Allahuakhbar” repeatedly

Ya rite... killing passengers with the majority are Indonesians. :rolleyes:
 

looneytan

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Re: OMG! AirAsia flight QZ8501 pilot final words were “Allahuakhbar” repeatedly

Captain Iriyanto's last words " tony, go give dog fuck!"
 

tonychat

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Re: OMG! AirAsia flight QZ8501 pilot final words were “Allahuakhbar” repeatedly

oh man...being too religious is quite dangerous..for them..
 

Leongsam

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Re: OMG! AirAsia flight QZ8501 pilot final words were “Allahuakhbar” repeatedly

Muslims should not be allowed to pilot planes.
 

xpo2015

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Re: OMG! AirAsia flight QZ8501 pilot final words were “Allahuakhbar” repeatedly

41 passengers were from a church.

But AllahuAkbar could be uttered if your plane is strucked by lighting disabling the electrical system leaving the plane without power causing the plane to plunge 30,000 feet like a roller coaster ride.
 

syed putra

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Re: OMG! AirAsia flight QZ8501 pilot final words were “Allahuakhbar” repeatedly

they have not heard the recording yet you silly infidels.This guy was merely giving his opinion on what could have transpired during the last few minutes.
In any case, muslims normally will say allah hu akbar (Allah is great) whenever. But we all know that Muhamad Ali is the greatest.
 

mojito

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Re: OMG! AirAsia flight QZ8501 pilot final words were “Allahuakhbar” repeatedly

Hear of any Jews killed on the flight? This proves yet again the Jewish deity is more powerful than Mohammed.
 

xpo2015

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Re: OMG! AirAsia flight QZ8501 pilot final words were “Allahuakhbar” repeatedly

Zero's credibility really ZERO.
 

eatshitndie

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Re: OMG! AirAsia flight QZ8501 pilot final words were “Allahuakhbar” repeatedly

exclamations of shock and despair are 2nd nature, embedded deep in the consciousness. for example, when an american woman were about to cum, she would exclaimed "oh my god!!!!!" when a sinkie uncle were to face adversity, he would exclaimed "kanninabuchowcheebye!" by the way, only the data recorder is retrieved so far, not the voice recorder.

update: voice recorder found.
 
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Animalize

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AirAsia Flight QZ8501: Divers find cockpit voice recorder on wreck of doomed passenger jet


Jan 13, 2015 06:45
By Anthony Bond

Investigators hope it will be a key step in finding out why the plane crashed into the sea, killing 162 people

MAIN-QZ8501.jpg


Getty / Reuters

Divers have retrieved the cockpit voice recorder from the wreck of the doomed AirAsia passenger jet which crashed into the sea killing 162 people.

Indonesia AirAsia’s Flight QZ8501 lost contact with air traffic control in bad weather on December 28, less than halfway into a two-hour flight from Indonesia’s second-biggest city of Surabaya to Singapore.

The cockpit voice recorder, which retains the last two hours of conversation between the pilots and with air traffic controllers, was found close to where the flight data recorder was recovered from the bottom of the Java Sea on Monday.

When asked if the so-called black box was found, Santoso Sayogo, an investigator at the National Transportation Safety Committee, told Reuters: "We can confirm".

Together the black boxes, which are actually orange, contain a wealth of data that will be crucial for investigators piecing together the sequence of events that led to the Airbus A320-200 plunging into the sea.

The cockpit voice recorder was on board an Indonesian navy vessel and expected to be sent to the capital, Jakarta, for analysis, MetroTV said, quoting a transport official.

Investigators may need up to a month to get a complete reading of the data.

The AirAsia group’s first fatal accident took place more than two weeks ago, but wind, high waves and strong currents have slowed efforts to recover bodies and wreckage from the shallow waters off Borneo island.

Dozens of Indonesian navy divers took advantage of calmer weather this week to retrieve the black boxes and now hope to find the fuselage of the Airbus.

Forty-eight bodies have been plucked from the Java Sea and brought to Surabaya for identification. Searchers believe more bodies will be found in the plane’s fuselage.

"Our main task is to find the victims," Fransiskus Bambang Soelistyo, head of the National Search and Rescue Agency, told reporters before heading to Surabaya to meet families of the victims.

"Even if both (black boxes) are found, it doesn’t mean that our operation is over."

Relatives of the victims have urged the authorities to make finding the remains of their loved ones the priority.

"Even if the search has to last for a month, we are still hoping to find them," said Lioni, who lost four family members in the plane crash. "If they can find even one (of my family members), we would feel a little bit relieved."

 

Animalize

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Slim chance of recovering all bodies from AirAsia flight

Date January 13, 2015 - 8:15PM

Jewel Topsfield
Fairfax foreign correspondent

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Officers move the flight data recorder into a protective case for transportation. Photo: AFP

The head of the Indonesian rescue agency searching the ocean for bodies from the doomed AirAsia flight QZ8501 has reportedly said he is unsure all victims will be recovered.

VIVAnews news portal says Bambang Soelistyo, the head of national search and rescue agency Basarnas, told a parliamentary hearing the likelihood was only 20 per cent.

"As operation commander I still have hope (to find all victims)," VIVAnews said Soelistyo told the hearing on Tuesday.

But he said the period of search and rescue operation had been extended twice and there must be an end to it.

He said he would travel to Surabaya to give an explanation to the victims' families.

Meanwhile, MetroTV quoted the Ministry of Transportation saying a large AirAsia object had been located 30 metres below the water.

Rescuers remain hopeful large numbers of bodies will be found still strapped in their chairs when the plane's main body is found.

Divers have so far found 48 of the 162 Indonesian, South Korean, Malaysian, Singaporean, French and British people who died when the plane crashed into the Java Sea on December 28.

The cockpit voice recorder has also been excavated from the ocean and is on the Banda Aceh warship, MetroTV reported on Tuesday.

Flight QZ8501 was operated by Indonesia AirAsia, of which 49 per cent is owned by AirAsia and the remaining 51 per cent by Indonesian shareholders.

With Karuni Rompies

 

NewWorldRecord

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Long-haul Airbus planes to be fitted with ejectable black boxes

Airbus planes will be fitted with ejectable technology so devices can be found faster


PUBLISHED : Wednesday, 14 January, 2015, 1:31am
UPDATED : Wednesday, 14 January, 2015, 3:30am

Agence France-Presse in Paris

indonesia_airasia_plane_crash_ag02_47696285.jpg


The Cockpit Voice Recorder of the AirAsia flight QZ8501 after its recovery from the sea floor. Photo: EPA

Long-haul Airbus A350 and A380 passengers jets will soon come equipped with ejectable black boxes that can float, making them easier to find in an air crash at sea, aviation sources said.

"At the end of last year Airbus got the green light from EASA (European Air Security Agency) to work on the necessary modifications to its planes in order to install these new black boxes in the rear of the planes," one of the sources said.

An EASA spokesman confirmed the agency was working on changing the necessary certification to allow Airbus to equip its planes with the new flight data and cockpit voice recorders. The technology, which has already been approved for military aircraft, has not been used in civil aviation because - up until a few years ago - air accidents mainly happened during take-off or landing. Black boxes are generally found easily on land.

But in recent years passenger jets have crashed into the ocean, raising the need for new technology to help find the black boxes.

These recorders are critical in air crash investigations as they provide information on plane operations and pilot conversations. Investigators say they help explain 90 per cent of crashes.

In 2009, an Air France jet travelling from Rio to Paris went down in the Atlantic with 228 people on board and the search for the black boxes at the bottom of the ocean took almost two years. Last March, a Malaysia Airlines plane disappeared over the Indian Ocean and its black boxes have still not been found.

Last month, an AirAsia plane crashed into the Java Sea and divers only yesterday recovered the cockpit recorder - a day after fnding the flight data recorder.

"The idea is to modify the black boxes so that each one records the flight details and [cockpit] conversations. One would be ejectable, the other not," a source close to Airbus said.

An ejectable black box would be equipped with an airbag so it could float on the water in the event of a crash at sea. It would also help to indicate the exact point of impact at the time of the crash and find the wreckage.

The Toulouse-based aircraft maker plans to install the ejectable black boxes on its long-haul A350 and A380 jets first since they are used in flights over oceans.

The International Civil Aviation Organisation is set to vote next month on a recommendation of one its working groups to equip commercial airliners with the technology.

Airliners already send data via satellite regarding flight performance to improve maintenance on the ground, so the changes are not hard to implement.


 

eErotica69

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Generous Asset
Re: OMG! AirAsia flight QZ8501 pilot final words were “Allahuakhbar” repeatedly

Hello Allah Akbar means Allah is Great. Is like Christians sayings God is Great or Praise the Lord.

The extremists misuse the word Allah Akbar.
 

xpo2015

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Well Done Singapore!

I know why God kept us all alive for a good reason!

We should continue to invest of tax dollars on Search and Rescue operations!

Today I am happy to holding on to my Sinkie Passport!! :biggrin:

2vbo506.png
 
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THE_CHANSTER

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Re: Well Done Singapore!

Ng Eng Hen was certainly not slow at coming forward in claiming the credit for this discovery by the RSN.

Posting pictures of the fuselage on his Facebook account before liaising with the Indonesian authorities responsible for salvage and recovery?

Using the RSN for cheap political points scoring.
 
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