That’s about the norm for major crash investigations.
When you need to put 100s of pieces of a plane back together along with examining wreckage that endured a crash at over 300 mph a couple of years makes sense. The ship hit at slow speeds suffered no damage to any part that would matter for an investigation.
“That’s about the norm for major crash investigations.‘“
Yes. I’m not surprised. I suspect the rebuilding of the bridge will be underway before the final report.
“That’s about the norm for major crash investigations.”
It’s a wonder you are not burned in effigy for saying on this thread something with sanity and understanding of previous major accidents, as opposed to seeing a conspiracy in everthing.
This is not an airplane crash. They already have all the information they are ever going to have to determine what happened.