The first prototype FDR was produced in 1957 by Dr. David Warren of the then Aeronautical Research Laboratories of Australia. In 1953 and 1954, a series of fatal mishaps on the De Havilland DH106 Comet prompted the grounding of the entire fleet pending an investigation. Dr. Warren, a chemist specializing in aircraft fuels, was involved in a professional committee discussing the possible causes. Since there had been neither witnesses or survivors, Dr. Warren conceived of a crash survivable method to record the flight crew's conversation, reasoning they would likely know the cause.
Despite his 1954 report entitled "A Device for Assisting Investigation into Aircraft Accidents" and a 1957 prototype FDR called "The ARL Flight Memory Unit", aviation authorities from around the world were largely uninterested. This changed in 1958 when Sir Robert Hardingham, the Secretary of the UK Air Registration Board, became interested. Dr. Warren was asked to create a pre-production model which culminated in the "Red Egg", the world's first commercial FDR , made by the British firm of S. Davall & Son. The "Red Egg" got its name from its shape and bright red color. Incidentally, the term "Black Box" came from a meeting about the "Red Egg", when afterwards a journalist told Dr. Warren, "This is a wonderful black box." The unit itself was based on a wire recorder fitted into a perspex box firmly screwed together. The first commercial airliner fitted with an FDR was the Hawker-Siddeley HS121 Trident.
Good Luck!!!
2007-02-17 01:46:54
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answer #1
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answered by Anonymous
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Those trained to look for an aircraft's "black box" know that it is painted orange so it would make it easier to find. If not, that person should not be involved in the search. It's call a black box because early aircrafts had all their electronic boxes painted black. So anything with electronics in it was nicknamed "Black box". Today the term is slang for any electronic box. The media loves to use slang and the public is clueless.
2007-02-17 01:45:01
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answer #2
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answered by Mathlady 6
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Any sealed enclosure that contains electric/electronic components and that performs a function is colloquially referred to as a "black box". The Flight Data Recorder (FDR) or Cockpit Voice Recorder (CVR) on an airplane was thus named even though it has always been painted either red or orange for easy identification in a crash/fire.
2007-02-17 02:11:24
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answer #3
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answered by Anonymous
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The term "black container" is often utilized to any device that's extremely technical in nature, for this reason mysterious to the untrained individual. As utilized to commercial plane, "black packing containers" make a non-provide up recording of the radio transmissions between the plane and Air site visitors administration to boot as all incidental conversations that happen between group participants in the cockpit by ability of microphones placed in the cockpit. apart from, the "black packing containers" checklist all tool readings, administration settings and flight administration positions. those documents are very effective in growing to be an entire photograph of the region and events best as much as an twist of destiny. in actuality the information in modern-day gadgets would be used to create a picture representation of the plane's overall performance only approximately as actual as a action picture.
2016-11-23 14:50:11
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answer #4
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answered by ? 4
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Because - believe it or not - the surname of the man who invented the idea was - Black. Hence, the Black Box. (This is true!)
2007-02-17 01:43:57
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answer #5
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answered by Anonymous
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what the 1st man said!
2007-02-18 08:18:26
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answer #6
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answered by Anonymous
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