The discovery of bird residue in both engines of the Jeju Air Boeing 737-800 that crashed on Dec. 29 at Muan International Airport in South Korea offers a possible explanation of why the pilots were ...
Preliminary report confirms Baikal teal DNA in engines, but stalled recorders leave critical four-minute gap in crash ...
They are not actually black but high-visibility orange. Experts disagree how the nickname originated but it has become synonymous with the quest for answers when planes crash. Many historians ...
By Daisuke Wakabayashi Reporting from Seoul When Jeju Air’s status as South Korea’s biggest low-cost carrier seemed under threat from the merger of the country’s two biggest airlines last ye ...
The authorities are focusing on a possible bird strike coupled with the functioning of the localizer landing guidance ...
South Korea’s authorities investigating last month’s Jeju Air plane crash have submitted a preliminary accident report to the UN aviation agency and to the authorities of the United States ...
The preliminary report was released by the Aviation and Railway Accident Investigation Board on Monday in South Korea.
It happened about four minutes after the pilot of the airliner operated by Jeju Air reported a bird strike. Authorities investigating the crash plan to analyse what caused the black boxes ...
Flight data and cockpit voice recorders on the South Korean Jeju Air plane which crashed last month, killing 179 people, stopped recording about four minutes before it came down at Muan airport, ...
SEOUL: The wreckage of the Jeju Air plane that crashed at Muan International Airport was set to be fully retrieved by Wednesday (Jan 15), the government said, promising a detailed analysis of all ...
Investigators found bird feathers and blood in both engines of the Jeju Air jet that crashed in South Korea last month, killing 179 people, a person familiar with the probe said on Friday.