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Probe: Flight 447 autopilot not on before crash

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buy this photo Air France employees stand outside the Notre-Dame cathedral in Paris Wednesday during an ecumenical church service for relatives and families of the passengers of Air France's flight 447, which vanished Monday over the Atlantic ocean. (AP Photo/Bob Edme, pool)

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  • Probe: Flight 447 autopilot not on before crash
  • Probe: Flight 447 autopilot not on before crash
  • Probe: Flight 447 autopilot not on before crash

PARIS - Signals sent by Air France Flight 447 before it disappeared show its autopilot was not on, the head of the French agency leading the investigation into the crash of 447 said Saturday. | Interactive: Deadliest plane crashes

Agency head Paul-Louis Arslanian said it was not clear if the autopilot had been switched off by the pilots or had stopped working because it received conflicting airspeed readings.

Plane manufacturer Airbus says the investigation found the flight received inconsistent readings from different instruments as it struggled in a massive thunderstorm.

Alain Bouillard, head of the investigation into the crash, told reporters that, "we also saw messages that show the automatic pilot wasn't working."

Arslanian said investigators are analyzing 24 messages sent automatically by the plane during the last minutes of the flight.

He said investigators are searching a zone of several hundred square miles (square kilometers) for the debris.

It is vital to locate a beacon called a "pinger" that should be attached to the cockpit voice and data recorders, now presumed to be deep in the Atlantic, he said.

"We have no guarantee that the pinger is attached to the recorders," Arslanian said.

Holding up a pinger in the palm of his hand, he said: "This is what we are looking for in the middle of the Atlantic Ocean."

Investigators are trying to determine the location of the debris in the ocean based on the height and speed of the plane at the time the last message was received. Currents could also have scattered debris far along the ocean floor, he said.

"You see the complexity of the problem," he said.

Laurent Kerleguer, an engineer specialized in the ocean floor working with the investigation team, said the zone seen as the most likely site of the debris was 15,112 feet (4,606 meters) at its deepest point and 2,835 feet (864 meters) at its shallowest.

Water salinity and temperature can affect the distance that the beacon's signal can travel, Kerleguer said.

The Airbus A330 from Rio de Janeiro to Paris disappeared nearly four hours after takeoff on Sunday night, killing all 228 aboard. It was Air France's deadliest plane crash and the world's worst commercial air accident since 2001.

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