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Red Sea crash pilots noticed problem, Egypt says
Cairo, Mar 05: The pilot of the Egyptian plane which crashed into the Red Sea in January, killing 148 people, realised something was wrong while the plane was turning after take-off, an Egyptian civil aviation official said.
Cairo, Mar 05: The pilot of the Egyptian plane which crashed
into the Red Sea in January, killing 148 people, realised something
was wrong while the plane was turning after take-off, an Egyptian
civil aviation official said.
The pilot commented on an anomaly shortly after the autopilot was
briefly engaged for about four seconds, investigator Shaker Qilada
told a news conference yesterday.
But the fact that the flight crew of the Boeing 737 used the
autopilot system and then disengaged it is not unusual and may have
nothing to do with the accident, said Qilada.
The plane plunged into the sea off the diving resort of Sharm
el-Sheikh on January 3, minutes after take-off for Cairo and Paris.
All the people aboard, including 134 French tourists, were killed
and few remains have been recovered.
Egyptian authorities, in conjunction with Boeing and the French, have been analysing the cockpit voice recorder and the flight data recorder to find out what went wrong.
Egyptian authorities, in conjunction with Boeing and the French, have been analysing the cockpit voice recorder and the flight data recorder to find out what went wrong.
``After the autopilot was disengaged, we get a comment from the pilot that he saw something that is not normal. Few seconds later they also announced that the aircraft was not reacting in the way he expected,`` Qilada said.
``Then the aircraft was going to the right turn and that is contrary to what should happen... There is an effort to recover but it`s too late. By the time the aircraft was coming near to a normal condition it was actually down in the water,`` he said.
Bureau Report