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US navy Captain Mark Matthews is not prepared to say whether his crew located the "black box" from Malaysia Airlines Flight MH370.
"I don't want to build up anyone's hopes," said Matthews, the navy's supervisor of salvage and diving.
"We are working within a 3-mile (4.8-km) grid and it is painstakingly slow work."
The search area in which the Australian Defence Force vessel Ocean Shield is operating is about 1,800 km west of Perth, the capital of Western Australia state.
Ocean Shield, which detected the pings late on Saturday night and on Sunday morning, is towing a pinger locator at speeds of 3.7 to 9.3 km per hour, Matthews said.
The towed underwater vehicle can detect signals from locator beacons attached to the black box.
"What it has detected so far are pulses consistent with the flight data and cockpit voice recorders," Matthews said.
But the battery life of the beacon was fast running out on Monday, 31 days after the Boeing777 with 239 passengers and crew disappeared.
All those involved in the search say the battery life can run for 40 to 45 days. But the pulses will become gradually weaker.
"I would be more confident if we could relocate those signals again," Matthews said.
"The pinger locator can track to depths of 3,000 to 6,000 meters. The problem we face is that the Bluefin-21 autonomous underwater vehicle we have can only operate to a maximum depth of 4,500 meters.
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