Govt said black boxes were initially examined in South Korea but were later transferred to a US National Transportation Safety Board laboratory.
The Boeing 737-800 was flying from Thailand to Muan, South Korea, on December 29 carrying 181 passengers and crew when it ...
Authorities investigating the disaster that killed 179 people, the worst on South Korean soil, plan to analyse what caused the black boxes to stop recording.
SEOUL: South Korea's transport ministry said Saturday that the black boxes holding the flight data and cockpit voice ...
South Korean officials sent the voice recorder to be analyzed at an NTSB lab in the US after they discovered data was missing ...
Jeju Air flight 7C2216’s flight recorders have been recovered after crash that killed 179 people, but authorities say data ...
Flight recorders from the passenger jet that crashed in South Korea last month, killing more than 170 people, stopped working ...
The flight data and cockpit voice recorders on the Jeju Air jet that crashed on Dec. 29 stopped recording about four minutes ...