The two black boxes on missing Malaysia Airlines flight MH370 were never returned to their manufacturers although they were due for overhauls and battery replacements in 2012, CNN reported today.
Quoting the president of the pinger manufacturer Dukane Seacom of Sarasota, Anish Patel, the report said that this would leave three possibilities.
First, the airline could have replaced the old pingers with new ones, or it could have had another company perform the necessary maintenance, or it could have let the scheduled maintenance lapse – meaning the pingers would have a shortened battery life, the report said.
It said MAS did not respond to the network's query about the compliance of the pingers on MH370.The battery life of the pinger would have dropped from the required 30 days to 20 or 25 days if the original battery had been used in the black boxes, Patel told CNN.
But it noted that in an earlier email last week about the airline's storage practices, MAS said: "We are unaware of any issue with the ULB (pinger) or its batteries."
"This battery is not replaceable," the airline had said. "The battery is built-in inside the (pinger) and installed by OEM – Original Equipment Manufacturer."
The National Transportation Safety Board had earlier informed Dukane Seacom that it manufactured the pingers on MH370's black boxes.
Patel said the devices were manufactured in late 2005 and late 2006 and were due for overhauls and new batteries in 2012.
"(But) we have no record of those units ever coming back for a battery replacement."
He told CNN that because the pingers were sealed, airlines typically return them to the manufacturer for battery replacement.
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