![]() |
If this is your first visit, be sure to check out the FAQ by clicking the link above. You may have to register before you can post: click the register link above to proceed. To start viewing messages, select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below. |
|
|
Thread Tools | Display Modes |
#16
|
|||
|
|||
![]() "WingFlaps" wrote in message ... On Apr 21, 3:17 am, Bertie the Bunyip wrote: WingFlaps wrote in news:cc5e0db0-3e13-42b8-8d46- : On Apr 21, 2:07 am, Bertie the Bunyip wrote: WingFlaps wrote in news:3ba51b9f-6384-43cf- 9f74- : On Apr 20, 6:19 pm, wrote: On Apr 18, 5:51 pm, WingFlaps wrote: On Apr 19, 7:37 am, "tom418" wrote: This is only an emergency because it looks good on TV. A gear up is not a life threatening event. It would have been even less of a risk and done a lot less less damage to the plane if he had retracted the gear and stopped the engines and done a belly landing . Cheers Unless he had to go-around after feathering both engines. Why would he want to go around after short final? Are you saying the POH says land on on one wheel? Now apply some PIC skills. Which is safer, a belly landing with engines off or the crash landing the pilot made? Actually, a partial gear landing is considered safer. I've made on ( not by choice, one failed on touchdown) and damage was minimal. The airplane was flying agian the next day. S'funny you say that as I was reading some RAF stories from the war and it seemed like gear up was the way to go. The touble with one wheel down is what happens to the wing wen it catches on the ground and starts a groundloop. It seems to me that accidental gear ups do relativeley little damage to structure. Well, in my case it happened at high speed and we did eventually groundloop, bt at low speed and with little damage. The left prop got it, but the boss did a crank check and found it OK, so it flew the next day. Cracked drag link was the culprit. For large aircraft, even those without underslung engines, they do recommend that we take whatever is down. I know a few guys who have landed completely wheels up and the damage was pretty heavy. A Beech 99, for instance ( lots of those have been wheels up) For the Gulfstream III landing with any two (2) gear legs down and locked is preferred to landing with only one gear down or all gear up. Should only one gear be extended, it is recommended that the gear be retracted and an all gear up landing be performed. Landing with only the nose gear down and locked is specifically not recommended. Do you know why it would be different for heavies? Cheers No, but I sure he will make something up. He has a better imagination than MX. |
Thread Tools | |
Display Modes | |
|
|