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FAA finalizes 25 hour cockpit voice recording rule

The Federal Aviation Administration finalized on Friday a rule that will require cockpit voice recorders in all new passenger aircrafts to retain 25 hours of data by 2027, compared to the current 2-hour loop.

Since 2018, the National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB) has been advocating for the change. The United States, however, is lagging behind many other countries in terms of the requirements for commercial planes.

The voice recorder records transmissions, sounds and voices in the cockpit. This includes the pilots' and engine noises. It can be vital in determining why plane crashes happen. The FAA rule that was proposed in 2023 takes effect immediately, but some smaller aircraft have up to three years to comply. Congress passed legislation in 2024 requiring all passenger planes to be retrofitted by 2030 with 25-hour recording devices. Reporting by David Shepardson, Washington; editing by Chizu Nomiyama

(source: Reuters)