The two flight recorders on board a South Korean airliner stopped working before the jet crashed during an emergency landing ...
The discovery of the missing data suggests all power may have been cut, which is rare, a former government accident ...
The black boxes holding the flight data and cockpit voice recorders for the crashed Jeju Air flight that left 179 people dead ...
A total of 179 died in the crash, with just two crew members surviving in one of the nation’s worst aviation disasters.
After overcoming pariah status at the end of the last century, South Korea must learn what caused the catastrophe on Dec. 29 ...
Two people, both flight attendants, are the only survivors of the crash and are being treated at South Korean hospitals.
Before it suffered the deadliest crash in South Korea's history, budget airline Jeju Air was moving fast: racking up record ...
Ultimately, the plane crashed, killing 179 people in South Korea’s worst aviation disaster. A standard pre-flight inspection ...
Jeju Air Flight 7C2216 crashed in South Korea on Sunday, killing 179 people on board.
In recent years, South Korea has been considered among the safest ... Sunday's crash marks the first fatal accident for Jeju Air, founded in 2005 and named one of the best low-cost airlines ...
The flight data and cockpit voice recorders on the Jeju Air jet that crashed on Dec. 29 stopped recording about four minutes ...
The Jeju Air crash in South Korea is an outlier in a country considered to be a gold standard for airline safety.