EgyptAir crash: Tests begin on MS804 Plane recorders

Agents are subjecting the flight recorders

from the EgyptAir plane which slammed a month ago

to electrical tests before examination can start.

Egyptian air mishap examination sources told

Reuters news office it would take "heaps of time

what's more, exertion" to settle the two harmed recorders.

The flight information and cockpit voice recorders were

recovered for the current week.

It is still obscure why Flight MS804 collided with

the Mediterranean on 19 May, murdering every one of the 66

individuals on board.

The plane was flying from Paris to Cairo when it

vanished from radar.

Agents have said it is too soon to discount

any reasons for the accident, including terrorism.

The recorders are being tried in the Egyptian

common flight service's research centers in the capital

Cairo, AFP news office reports.

Egypt's Flying machine Mischance Examination

Board of trustees will examine them alongside

agents from France and the US.

The work may take a few weeks. Contingent upon

the size of the harm, the "secret elements" may

be sent to another country for repairs.

Prior, the board of trustees said the information recorder

had been recovered "in a few pieces" by a

expert ship, the John Lethbridge, which found

the destruction on Wednesday in a few areas

around 290km (180 miles) north of the Egyptian

coast, at a profundity of around 3,000m (9,800ft).

Egypt's considerate aeronautics priest has said a terrorist

assault is more probable than a specialized disappointment.

Mechanized electronic messages sent by the

plane uncovered that smoke indicators had gone

off in a latrine and in the flight zone underneath the

cockpit, minutes before the plane's sign was

lost.

On Monday, the examination board of trustees

affirmed that radar information had demonstrated the plane

turned 90 degrees left and afterward 360 degrees to

the privilege, dropping from 11,300m (37,000ft) to

4,600m (15,000ft) and after that 3,000m (10,000ft)

before it vanished.

What do we know as such?

EgyptAir Flight MS804 vanished over the

eastern Mediterranean from the get-go Thursday 19

May with 66 travelers and group on board

Some surface flotsam and jetsam was discovered 290km (180

miles) north of the Egyptian city of

Alexandria

Destruction was therefore found in a few

areas at a profundity of around 3,000m

(6,800ft)

Signals from the plane showed that smoke

was identified in the can and in the aeronautics

range beneath the cockpit

Air ship made a 90-degree left turn took after

by a 360-degree swing to one side some time recently

vanishing off radar

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