Lion Air JT610 cockpit voice recorder found

Investigators hope that the discovery will shed new light on the deadly crash. The National Transportation Safety Committee announced on Monday that the cockpit voice recorder (CVR) from last year’s Lion Air crash had been found. First Fleet Navy Information Agency head Arba Agung told The Jakarta Post that an agency team was being sent to retrieve […]

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This photo taken on October 10, 2018 shows a Lion Air Boeing 737-800 aircraft at the Mutiara Sis Al Jufri airport in Palu. - An Indonesian Lion Air passenger plane went missing on October 29, 2018 shortly after taking off from the capital Jakarta, an aviation authority official said, adding that a search and rescue operation is under way. (Photo by ADEK BERRY / AFP)

January 15, 2019

Investigators hope that the discovery will shed new light on the deadly crash.

The National Transportation Safety Committee announced on Monday that the cockpit voice recorder (CVR) from last year’s Lion Air crash had been found.

First Fleet Navy Information Agency head Arba Agung told The Jakarta Post that an agency team was being sent to retrieve the CVR from the location where it was found. The team will first clear the mud around the CVR before it can retrieve it.

The committee said in a statement that the CVR had stopped transmitting a location signal as the battery would have lasted only 73 days after the Oct. 29 crash.

Coordinating Maritime Affairs and Fisheries Minister Luhut  Pandjaitan also confirmed the finding.

“It’s very good progress. I think the information in the box might make things clear,” Luhut said.

The Lion Air plane, which crashed in the Java Sea, had faulty airspeed readings during its last four flights. The cockpit conversation and background noise recorded by the CVR may be crucial to unraveling what happened during the flight’s final moments, including at least some audio from the previous night’s trip from Denpasar, Bali, to Jakarta. The aircraft experienced problems on the flight from Bali with sensors used to calculate altitude and speed.

The National Search and Rescue Agency (Basarnas) had stopped its search for remaining victims of the crash, which killed all 189 people on board.

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