With all the modern means that are available, why have the flight recorders not been found as of yet? Coupled with a muiltiy country involvement. [and many millions of tax payers money have been used to do it on again coupled with milatary involvement]. It makes modern systems to sound to be stupid or all of us being "conned" by the powers that be? [and red faces on the ones concerned]. Unless we are being "miss informed". When it was said by many countries years ago that it was impossible not to find such a thing!.
Other - Europe - 3 Answers
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1 :
The ocean is deep my friend. Next time have them crash on land.
2 :
Deep oceans? Metal sinks? And what does Muility mean? I think I figured out the rest of your garbled question, but I can't figure out what that is.
3 :
The CVR and FDR are each boxes about the size of microwave ovens. They are doubtless entangled in some piece of fuselage laying on mountainous ocean bottom 8,000 to 15,000 feet (2400 to 4700 m) deep. The acoustic signals emitted by the data recorder "pingers" are likely attenuated by the fuselage, debris, and ocean bottom muck, if they survived at all. The temperature specification for the pingers requires a temperature of least 28 degrees F (-4 C) water for them to operateĆ¢€”the Atlantic in that area could well be colder. The initial search area was a circle some 50 miles (80 km) radius. That area was a best guess based on the debris field and predicted wind conditions spreading the debris. The area could be hundreds of miles from the actual location. Tell you what. I'll hide a transistor radio turned on loud enough to be heard at 50 feet away in large forest. You go find it. Should be easy with modern technology, right?