The term Black Box is a placeholder name used casually, often by journalists, to refer to a collection of several different recording devices used in transportation: the flight recorders (flight data recorder and cockpit voice recorder) in aircraft, the event recorder in railway diesel locomotives, the Event data recorder in automobiles and other recording devices in various vehicles. Black box (systems) is also a term used in physics and electronics to describe a mechanism in which the input and expected outputs are well understood but whose internal operations are deliberately and completely unknown, but this has no special connection with recording devices. The black box term originated when after a meeting about the first commercial flight recorder named the "Red Egg" for its colour and shape, someone commented that, "This is a wonderful black box." Black box is a more humorous than accurate term (the recorders are not generally black in colour as they are often intended to be spotted and recovered after incidents, nor are their operations unknown), and is almost never used within the flight safety industry. An alternative origin of the word is from World War 2 RAF terminology. During the period 1940-1945 new electronic innovations, such as Oboe, GEE and H2S, were added to aircraft (specifically bombers) on a regular basis. The prototypes were roughly covered in hand-made metal boxes, painted black to prevent reflections. After a time any piece of "new" electronics was referred to as the "box-of-tricks" or the "black-box". An expression that made its way into post-war civil aviation and ultimately, general useage. A number of observational comedians have joked that, because the box seems to be indestructible, the substance used to make the box should be used to make the entire vehicle (of course, this is far too expensive and in the case of aircraft, makes the vehicle too heavy). [1]


