Strong currents and poor visibility hinder search for AirAsia black box

Crane may be brought in to raise tail of aircraft

Indonesian navy divers searching for the black box from AirAsia Flight 8501 in the Java Sea. Photograph: Adek Berry/Reuters
Indonesian navy divers searching for the black box from AirAsia Flight 8501 in the Java Sea. Photograph: Adek Berry/Reuters

Strong currents and blinding silt thwarted an attempt by divers to find AirAsia Flight 8501's black boxes, which they hope are still located in the recently discovered tail of the plane.

The flight data and cockpit voice recorders, which are crucial to helping determine what caused the jet to go down with 162 people aboard on December 28th, are located in the rear of the aircraft.

A day after an unmanned underwater vehicle spotted the plane's tail, lying upside down and partially buried in the sea floor, divers were unable to make it past choppy seas and one-metre visibility, said National Search and Rescue chief Henry Bambang Soelistyo.

He said expert teams from Indonesia and France were looking at other options, including a crane to lift the tail.

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Ping-emitting beacons in the black boxes still have about 20 days before their batteries go dead, but high waves had prevented the deployment of ping locators, which are dragged by ships.

A total of six ships with ping locators were in the search area in the Java Sea, said Nurcahyo Utomo, an investigator from the National Commission for Transportation Safety.

He said that based on pictures taken by the divers, he believed that the black boxes were still attached to their original location.

“Once detected, we will try to find and lift up the black boxes as soon as possible,” he said.

The tail wreckage, identified by the plane’s registration number and part of the AirAsia logo, was located about nine kilometres (six miles) from where the Airbus A320 carrying 162 passengers and crew lost contact with the control tower on December 28th. The plane was nearly halfway between the Indonesian city of Surabaya and Singapore.

Tony Fernandes, AirAsia's chief executive officer, said that the airline's priority was still to recover all the bodies "to ease the pain of our families".

Four more bodies were retrieved from the sea today, bringing to 44 the number of victims recovered so far. Officials are hopeful many of the 121 bodies still unaccounted for will be found inside the fuselage, which is thought to be lying near the tail.

The carrier, meanwhile, said families of those killed would be compensated in accordance with Indonesian laws. Bad weather is believed to be a contributing factor to the crash.

Just before losing contact, the pilot told air traffic control he was approaching threatening clouds but was denied permission to climb to a higher altitude because of heavy air traffic. No distress signal was issued.