Tillat meg nok en gang å presentere den enkleste og billigste løsningen: Å montere CPI - Crash Position Indicator, på alle fly. Den er så viselig innrettet at den spretter av flyet/helikopteret når det treffer noe hardt, f.eks. vann. Den flyter og sender sin GPS posisjon til COSPAS/SARSAT. Denne løsningen er åpenbart for enkel for ICAO (Red.)
Pilots renew calls for tracking on aircraft
Pilots have renewed a call for improved tracking on
all aircraft on yesterday's three-year anniversary of the disappearance of
Malaysia Airlines flight MH370.
No concrete evidence has ever been able
to confirm what happened to the Boeing 777, something that the British Airline
Pilots' Association says should not be possible in modern day
aviation.
Latest speculation suggests a mysterious extra passenger
possibly took control of the cockpit before plunging the aircraft into the
Indian Ocean while it was on a service from Kuala Lumpur to Beijing.
The
multinational search for the aircraft, believed to be carrying 239 passengers
and crew, and its data recorders was the largest and most expensive in aviation
history.
A lawsuit filed against Boeing in a US District Court in South
Carolina, names seven malfunctions, from an electrical fire to depressurisation
of the aircraft's cabin, that could have led to the crew losing consciousness,
the 777's transponder stopping its transmission and the aircraft flying
undetected until it crashed after running out of fuel.
The suit was filed
by Gregory Keith, a special administrator for families who lost loved ones on
the flight. It names 44 victims as plaintiffs.
Despite today's
technology, it can take a long time to recover the part of the aircraft
equipment which holds all the vital information - the black boxes - or, in the
case of MH370, they may not be found at all.
Flight MH370 brought more
attention to the limitations of black boxes, namely the limited data storage and
finite battery life and signal distance of the undewater locator beacons
attached to them, according to Balpa.
The pilot's association renewed its
calls for better technology to aid the search of missing aircraft, something it
says will not only help give answers to the families of victims, but will also
give the aviation industry information to ensure safety is improved.
The
International Civil Aviation Organisation has already announced that aircraft
must have technology installed that transmit their position more regularly from
2021 and do so even more frequently when they are in distress.
But Balpa
says retro-fitting of older aircraft should also be considered.
Balpa
flight safety specialist, Steve Landells, said: "We don't believe it should be
possible, in this day and age, to lose an aircraft.
"The announcement
from Icao is welcome but if these systems are only fitted on new aircraft it
will be many years before the majority of planes will have this
technology.
"Whilst Icao have provided a small incentive to operators to
retro-fit a distress tracking system Balpa believes that there should be a
mandatory system in place that will allow the exact location of any aircraft
experiencing an emergency to be known.
"Thankfully, accidents are very
rare, but black boxes sinking to the bottom of the sea with the airframe delays
potentially life-saving recommendations, and leaves the families waiting on the
answers they so desperately need."
A Boeing spokesman told MailOnline it
does not comment on pending lawsuits but the company said its thoughts remained
with the people who died on Flight MH370.
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