South Korean aircraft probe Jeju Air finds DNA ducks in both jet engines who broke into the flames in Seoul
Seoul, South Korea – The first report on last year’s Jeju air accident in South Korea Confirmed traces of birds hit in aircraft motorcycles, although officers I didn’t determine the cause the accidents in which everything was killed except two of 181 people on board. The preliminary report on the accident announced on Monday by the Committee of Air Force and Railway Accidents in South Korea, he said that feathers and stains of birds had been found in both engines.
“The samples were sent to specialized organizations for DNA analysis, and the domestic organization identified them as belonging to Baikal Teals,” the report said, referring to a migratory duck.
The report also says that two black aircraft boxes are – a flight record holder and a vote record holder – stopped shooting about four minutes before the fall. This could complicate the efforts to find the cause of the collision.
Boeing 737-800 slipped out of escape at the Muan International Airport on December 29. Pushing into a concrete structure and broke into flames. The flight returned from Bangkok, and all the victims were South Korea, except for two Thai nationals.
Many analysts said that a concrete structure, which is located a series of antennas called localizer that runs aircraft while landing, should be built with lighter materials that could be easier to break after the impact. The Ministry of Transport in South Korea announced last week that it would remove the concrete structure at the airport.
Investigators have said earlier that air traffic controllers warned pilots to possible bird blows for two minutes before the aircraft issued a signal in a distress that confirmed that there was a bird hit, after which the pilots tried to emergency.
The preliminary report says the pilots also noticed a group of birds as they approached the runway at the Muan airport and that the security camera captured a plane that was approaching birds and during the aborted landing.
The report says that the authorities will disassemble the engines, deeply examine their components, analyze information about the control of a black frame and air traffic and explore evidence of the embankment, localizer and birds.
“These comprehensive investigative activities aim to determine the cause of the accident accurately,” the report said.
The Ministry of Transport said the preliminary report was sent to the international organization of civil aviation, Thailand, the United States and France. He said the plane was built in the USA for its engines in France.
He said that Muan Airport would remain closed until April 18th.