Officials said Wednesday they have recovered the cockpit voice recorder, one of two “black boxes” carried by the China Eastern Airlines Boeing 737-800.The search was temporarily suspended due to a downpour.
The Boeing 737-800 was flying at 29,000 feet when it nosedived Monday into a gap in the mountains outside the southern city of Wuzhou.
The recorder, one of two “black boxes” aboard the plane, was found with damage to both its exterior casing and the recording unit inside. It will now be sent to Beijing for decoding and analysis, with the speed of that process depending on the amount of damage to the unit.
The cockpit recorder captures conversation in the cockpit and other sounds. The other records information about speed, altitude, direction up or down, pilot actions and performance of key systems. The search is now focused on the second box.
Rescuers with sniffer dogs and drones also found wallets, identity cards and debris.
Authorities gave no indication they found survivors.
Debris is scattered over a wide area that includes the other side of the mountain, state broadcaster CCTV said. The main crash area, now a barren pit in the forested mountainside, is about half the size of a football field.
Investigators have declined to discuss possible reasons for the crash. Damage to the aircraft was severe, which makes the investigation “very difficult,” said Zhu Tao, director of CAAC’s Office of Aviation Safety.
“We cannot have a clear assessment of the cause of the accident with the information currently available,” Zhu said Tuesday at a news conference.
Authorities are “carrying out in-depth investigation” of the aircraft’s design and maintenance, air traffic control, weather and other issues, he said.
What do we know about the China Eastern Airlines plane?
The 6 1/2-year-old plane’s “technical condition was stable” and met requirements to fly, said Sun Shiying, the chairman of the Yunnan provincial branch of China Eastern Airlines.
The plane was flying from Kunming, the capital of Yunnan province in the southwest, to Guangzhou in the southeast.
The central government sent a team led by Vice Premier Liu He and a senior Cabinet official, State Councilor Wang Yong, to the site to “guide rescue work” and the investigation of the crash.