Welcome to Flightinfo.com

  • Register now and join the discussion
  • Friendliest aviation Ccmmunity on the web
  • Modern site for PC's, Phones, Tablets - no 3rd party apps required
  • Ask questions, help others, promote aviation
  • Share the passion for aviation
  • Invite everyone to Flightinfo.com and let's have fun

Eclipse Jet lands gear-up

Welcome to Flightinfo.com

  • Register now and join the discussion
  • Modern secure site, no 3rd party apps required
  • Invite your friends
  • Share the passion of aviation
  • Friendliest aviation community on the web

BoilerUP

Citation style...
Joined
Nov 11, 2003
Posts
5,311
ALBUQUERQUE (AP) - Eclipse Aviation says pilot error caused one of its test jet airplanes to make a belly landing at Albuquerque's international airport. The Albuquerque-based company says there were no mechanical or electrical problems that caused the airplane to touch down Saturday with its landing gear retracted. Company president Vern Raburn says the airplane will fly again. Eclipse has five test jet airplanes. The company is developing the Eclipse 500 -- a twin-engine, six-seat airplane. Raburn has said the company wants to achieve Federal Aviation Administration certification next year. Eclipse plans to sell the airplanes for about $1.3 million each.


Every retractable gear airplane I've ever flown (ESPECIALLY the turbine ones) has a gear warning and/or configuration horn based upon the position of the power levers. I would imagine that even test aircraft have the same system. Is that correct?

But for the grace of God go I...but if a professional pilot lands with his gear up in this new VLJ I'd hate to see what happens once owner/operators start transitioning from their Barons and Mooneys...
 
You make a good point. Even if there wasn't a warning horn, what kind of professional test pilot forgets to put the gear down?
 
Wow, I hope that none of you ever make such a mistake in your career. I guess that most of you who are dogging this guy must have went to Riddle or some other pilot factory so you are immune to screwing up. Do you think the guys that have actually done it ever thought they would make such a simple mistake as forgetting the gear? :rolleyes:
 
Last edited:
I prefer the message:

L/G Gear Not Downlocked

Always a helpful reminder when you forget to be a pilot, use SOP, or checklists. You know, when the crap hits the fan.

I'd guess that the test airplane doesn't have fully operational warning systems yet.
 
I flew a King Air 200 for a time doing air ambulance work. I visited one rural airport frequently, and at night, always flew the VOR approach for terrain. One night, rough weather kept me busy, single pilot, on the approach. I always put the gear down at the VOR. I don't recall what was different this night, but I was surprised when I found myself with the runway in sight, and a gear warning. I dropped the gear and it was uneventful, but the honest truth is that despite a religous verbal reading on the checklists even when flying single pilot, I missed the gear. Would I have landed without it? I don't know. I usually check it five times before landing, out of habit. But I missed it up to that point.

Perhaps just as disturbing when I reviewed what had happened later, was the feeling that since I was past the VOR, the gear must be down...at least being that far into the approach, convention and too much familiarity told me the gear was naturally down because I always put it down at the VOR.

I don't at all believe in "there are those who have and those who will," though I've seen some VERY experienced pilots land gear up in a variety of equipment...but I also believe that nobody is "immune," that complacency is dangerous, and that no matter how great your certification and experience, every one of us stands the same chance of having a failure (pilot or aircraft) every single time. All the more reason to be vigiliant.
 
Forgetting the gear in a test plane? You woulda thunk that Eclipse would have devised a computer model to test the belly durability of the plane instead of actually going through the exercise.

Ouch. At least now they know how much it's gonna cost to fix that particular mishap.
 
SkyBoy1981 said:
have went to Riddle or some other pilot factory so you are immune to screwing up.
Yep, I'm perfect. I never make mistakes, never will, and I'm much better than you.
 
Reposted again from the original, with emphasis this time.

BoilerUP said:
But for the grace of God go I...but if a professional pilot lands with his gear up in this new VLJ I'd hate to see what happens once owner/operators start transitioning from their Barons and Mooneys...
 

Latest resources

Back
Top