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Go around after contacting pavement with gear up?

  • Thread starter Thread starter FN FAL
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Well, i just learned something - double check all control linkages. - i have already made the gaps on all flight surfaces on the larger size or a tad more.

Too many planes have had the aileron jam into the wing pocket. on the canards the elevator is "captured" on the inside by the fuse and the outside by the wing tip - both gaps are 1/16 oversize, same with the ailerons and the rudders.

All nuts and bolts are torqued - every single one of them and of course all are an/ms grade.
 
Flying Illini said:
This happened at my old flight school. An instructor and a student in a BE-76. They drug the step and bent the prop tips as they went around. Came back around and landed with no issues...other than some bruised ego's and a talk with the CP. It was pretty expensive.
Flying, So you must have been an Aviator student at ft pierce, I had just finished a time building program when it happened
 
I saw a gear up "Touch-n-go" once. Burned the centerline paint right off the runway. Flames from the friction of the belly against all the old tire rubber trailed back 30' and over the horizontal stab. But the props never touched, and the aircraft made a normal landing later back at base with little more than some scraped belly skin and some sheepish pilots.




Oh, it was a C-130... :D
 
Many years ago a United Airlines 737 on a training flight out of Denver made a gear up touch and go at Pueblo. Story was that the gear CB had been pulled for the stall series and after the engines pods made contact with the runway the check-pilot assumed command and returned to Denver and made an uneventful landing.
 
con-pilot said:
... and after the engines pods made contact with the runway the check-pilot assumed command and returned to Denver and made an uneventful landing.

....and penned his letter of resignation to the Training Manager.

Didn't a regional B-1900 do pretty much the same thing at ORD a few years ago? They didn't go around, though.
 
"....and penned his letter of resignation to the Training Manager."

That was the rumor at the time Eagle.
 
happened in a UND arrow at an airport about 35 miles from GFK a couple years ago. what's really spectacular about the story is that the solo pilot, a commercial applicant, did another lap in the pattern, did a T&G with the gear down, decided the airplane was airworthy, then flew it back to GFK and landed it without telling anybody what happened.
 
erj-145mech said:
And when Piper first introduced the PA32R series airplanes, they were equipped with landing gear auto extenders. They worked just fine and lowered the hull insurance to boot. Wish some lawyer wouldn't have talked Piper from removing them. Saved a lot of ego's and repair bills.

There was actually a crash in an arrow that led to this being taken off the newer a/c. The plane was flying through some ice and trying to climb out of it. The "pitot" tube that was used for gear extention iced up and dropped the grear. Once the gear is down in an arrow.....well thats pretty much all she wrote!!! Seems like they could have just heated the darn thing!
 
mckpickle said:
There was actually a crash in an arrow that led to this being taken off the newer a/c. The plane was flying through some ice and trying to climb out of it. The "pitot" tube that was used for gear extention iced up and dropped the grear. Once the gear is down in an arrow.....well thats pretty much all she wrote!!! Seems like they could have just heated the darn thing!

The flight school I was at had 2 arrows with the "helping hand" aka automatic gear extension and the pitot tubes on them I believe are heated. Maybe he just forgot to turn on the pitot heat, which is the same switch which activates the pitot tube for the gear on the pilots side of the A/C?
 
PC12Cowboy said:
Flying, So you must have been an Aviator student at ft pierce, I had just finished a time building program when it happened


I more than likely know Flying Illini and maybe you as well Cowboy.
 
Old Frontier landed a 737-200 on the pods in Casper, WY back in the day. They jacked it up, swung the gear, threw on some new cowls parts and were off and running in no time.
 
Gear up prop strike, go-around, land, then TAKE OFF?

I know of a guy who successfully executed a go-around after hitting the runway with the prop and belly of a Piper Comanche. He didn't tell the tower the reason for the abort, but flew a complete pattern and landed on the same runway (the short GA parallel, BTW). After parking at an FBO, he walked into the line office and asked the guy behind the counter to come out to his plane with him, saying that he wanted to ask his advice on something. They looked at the prop, which had several inches of both tips bent about 180 degrees, with significant chunks of metal missing. It was a very windy day and he claimed that a gusty tailwind had picked up his tail and caused a propstrike during his taxi. :rolleyes: Then the transient pilot (I HATE to call him that) asked the lineman, whom he didn't know from Adam, whether he thought "it would be OK to fly home (about 60 nm) that way?" :eek:

After being convinced, with some diffuculty, that it would definitely NOT be OK, he then wanted to know how much it would cost to "fix" and would it be ready in a couple of hours when he returned from the meeting he had flown in for. Oh, by the way, it was a Sunday! I think if you look up "clueless" in the dictionary, there is a picture of this guy! On top of everything else, it turned out to be a borrowed airplane. Not sure whether the owner knew it had been "borrowed" either.
 
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