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Can a plane fly without a black box?

“Black box” recording and storage equipment are compulsory on all commercial and corporate flights. The black box is actually two separate pieces of equipment - a cockpit voice recorder (CVR) and a flight data recorder (FDR). These record and store all audio, flight control info, and other data throughout the flight.



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There are a handful of cases in which black boxes have not been recovered, and a couple of cases in which the flight data recorder was found but not the cockpit voice recorder, or vice versa.

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Flight recorders are designed to survive both high-speed impact and post-impact fire. They are, however, not invulnerable and are sometimes destroyed. The recorder is designed to ensure that data, rather than the recorder itself, survives an accident.

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Answer: If a flight data recorder is recovered from the water, it is submerged in fresh, clean water to prevent deposits such as salt or minerals from drying out within the device.

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An aircraft actually has two black boxes. One is a flight data recorder, which stores information on specific parameters such as flight control and engine performance. The second is a cockpit voice recorder, which records background sound and conversations between crew members and air traffic control.

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A black box is a flight data recorder that must be in every air vehicle. All flight information is recorded into the black box with a specific algorithm. This makes the recorded flight data accessible to authorities when needed. Contrary to popular belief, the black box is mostly bright orange, not black.

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While human ears cannot hear the ping, submarines, ships, and aircraft can easily detect it using sonar equipment. While each black box is fitted with a battery with a six-year life span, once the locator beacon is activated, it can only send out pings for 30 days.

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If an accident occurs, a transcript of the flight is made going back to the start of the flight or however far back the tape allows. The actual voice recordings are supposedly never released to the public. in most cases the voice recorder is continually overwritten.

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