Key Points

The AAIB has submitted its preliminary report on the AI-171 crash to the Civil Aviation Ministry. For the first time, black box data was successfully decoded in India. The investigation involves international experts from NTSB, Boeing, and GE. The probe marks a shift from India's previous reliance on foreign labs for black box analysis.

Key Points: AAIB Submits AI-171 Crash Preliminary Report to Civil Aviation Ministry

  • AAIB submits initial AI-171 crash report to Civil Aviation Ministry
  • Black box data successfully retrieved in India for first time
  • NTSB, Boeing, and GE assisting in technical investigation
  • Probe includes IAF, HAL, and aviation medicine experts
3 min read

AAIB submits preliminary report on AI-171 crash to Ministry of Civil Aviation: Sources

AAIB submits initial findings on Air India AI-171 crash, involving 250 fatalities, with black box data now decoded in India.

"The AAIB Lab in Delhi is now fully equipped to decode both CVR and FDR within the country. – Sources"

New Delhi, July 8

Aircraft Accident Investigation Bureau (AAIB) has submitted the preliminary report on the AI-171 crash in Ahmedabad to the Ministry of Civil Aviation and the concerned authorities, sources said on Tuesday.

According to sources, the report is based on the initial findings of the probe of the Air India plane crash in which more than 250 people were killed.

According to the Ministry of Civil Aviation, the Crash Protection Module (CPM) from the front black box was safely retrieved, and on June 25, 2025, the memory module was successfully accessed and its data downloaded at the AAIB Lab. Sources familiar with the process told ANI that an identical black box, referred to as a "golden chassis," was used to confirm whether data could be accurately recovered from the black boxes. One black box was recovered from the rooftop of a building at the crash site on June 13, and the other from the debris on June 16.

The investigation is being led by AAIB officials and includes technical members from the Indian Air Force, Hindustan Aeronautics Limited (HAL), and the National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB) from the United States, which is the official investigative agency of the country of the aircraft's design and manufacture.

The Director General of AAIB is heading the probe. An aviation medicine expert and an Air Traffic Control officer have also been included in the investigation team. Sources confirmed that the NTSB team is currently stationed in Delhi and working closely with Indian authorities at the AAIB Lab. Officials from Boeing and GE are also present in the national capital to assist with the technical process.

Before the crash of Air India Flight AI-171, AAIB used to send black boxes of damaged aircraft and, in some cases, even helicopters to overseas decoding centres in countries like the UK, USA, France, Italy, Canada, and Russia. Indian labs earlier lacked the equipment and dedicated facility to retrieve black box data from serious aviation accidents. That has now changed, and the AAIB Lab in Delhi is fully equipped to decode both Cockpit Voice Recorders (CVR) and Flight Data Recorders (FDR) within the country.

In earlier crashes, black box decoding was mostly done abroad. In the 1996 Charkhi Dadri crash, black boxes were decoded by IAC in Moscow and the CVR in Farnborough, UK. In the 2010 Mangalore crash, recorders were repaired and decoded by the NTSB in the US. In the 2015 Delhi crash, decoding was done at the engineering lab of Canada's Transportation Safety Board. In the 2020 Kozhikode crash, the CVR and FDR were downloaded at DGCA's flight recorder facility, but the data was processed with help from the NTSB.

- ANI

Share this article:

Reader Comments

S
Sarah B
As an aviation enthusiast, I'm impressed with the international cooperation here. The involvement of NTSB and Boeing shows transparency. But why did it take so many tragedies for India to develop this capability? Safety should never be compromised.
A
Ananya R
My heart goes out to all the families who lost loved ones 😔 The technical details are important, but let's not forget the human tragedy behind this report. Hope the findings lead to better safety measures.
V
Vikram M
Good to see HAL and IAF experts involved. But why does it always take a major accident for systems to improve? Our aviation sector needs proactive safety audits, not reactive measures after tragedies.
P
Priya S
The mention of previous crashes is heartbreaking. We've lost too many lives to aviation accidents. Hope this investigation brings real change in maintenance and operational standards across all Indian airlines.
K
Karthik V
While the lab development is commendable, I'm concerned about the timeline. The crash happened weeks ago and we're just getting preliminary findings? Families deserve faster answers and closure.

We welcome thoughtful discussions from our readers. Please keep comments respectful and on-topic.

Leave a Comment

Minimum 50 characters 0/50