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I just got a call from a friend who was watching the news showing live
shots of a Cessna making a belly landing at MMU. Sounds like one of the mains wouldn't lock down - did anybody see this? I'm sure it'll be on the 6pm news tonight. |
#2
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"Kingfish" wrote in message
... I just got a call from a friend who was watching the news showing live shots of a Cessna making a belly landing at MMU. Sounds like one of the mains wouldn't lock down - did anybody see this? I'm sure it'll be on the 6pm news tonight. I saw it on MSNBC while waiting in line somewhere. It looked like a Cessna 172RG. When he came in to land, only the left gear was out which left me wondering why he did not retract it in the interest of directional control. Once he touched down, it became obvious the left gear was not locked in the down position when it safely retracted/folded back immediately on touchdown. After some sparks and a short rollout, the emergency truck came and sprayed the underbelly and the pilot got out a bit later. It took him a little longer than I would expect but he may have tried to secure the plane in a certain manner before exiting. Good job by the pilot overall. Marco |
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On Thu, 29 Nov 2007 13:43:42 -0500, "Marco Leon"
I saw it on MSNBC while waiting in line somewhere. It looked like a Cessna 172RG. My thought too...if I read the tail # right it's 9453 8,0, or D 9453D is a 172RG 9453 8 and 0 are 182Q's, so it must be a D (?) When he came in to land, only the left gear was out which left me wondering why he did not retract it in the interest of directional control. I saw the cnn video, it was obvious to me that it was trailing and not locked. They are a bit further forward if down and locked. If you have a hydraulic failure, it wont stay up. But I also have about 55 hours in 'em and took my commercial in one ![]() Once he touched down, it became obvious the left gear was not locked in the down position when it safely retracted/folded back immediately on touchdown. it basically trailed back. they are either locked down or held up by hydraulic pressure. After some sparks and a short rollout, the emergency truck came and sprayed the underbelly and the pilot got out a bit later. It took him a little longer than I would expect but he may have tried to secure the plane in a certain manner before exiting. Good job by the pilot overall. YES...about TIME GA gets some good press. Dumb comment on cnn tho about "I guess there was two inside there" The right seater exited first, and the pilot later, probably after verifying everything was secure and master off Uhh...doesnt the PILOT usually sit on the left? ![]() obviously they didnt know dat --Don Don Byrer KJ5KB Radar Tech & Smilin' Commercial Pilot Guy Glider & CFI wannabe kj5kb-at-hotmail.com "I have slipped the surly bonds of earth; now if I can just land without bending the gear..." "Watch out for those doves...smack-smack-smack-smack..." |
#4
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And he said that the pilot had shut the engine down as as was standard
procedure. Clearly clueless. and no the engine was running till it hit the ground. "Don Byrer" wrote in message ... On Thu, 29 Nov 2007 13:43:42 -0500, "Marco Leon" I saw it on MSNBC while waiting in line somewhere. It looked like a Cessna 172RG. My thought too...if I read the tail # right it's 9453 8,0, or D 9453D is a 172RG 9453 8 and 0 are 182Q's, so it must be a D (?) When he came in to land, only the left gear was out which left me wondering why he did not retract it in the interest of directional control. I saw the cnn video, it was obvious to me that it was trailing and not locked. They are a bit further forward if down and locked. If you have a hydraulic failure, it wont stay up. But I also have about 55 hours in 'em and took my commercial in one ![]() Once he touched down, it became obvious the left gear was not locked in the down position when it safely retracted/folded back immediately on touchdown. it basically trailed back. they are either locked down or held up by hydraulic pressure. After some sparks and a short rollout, the emergency truck came and sprayed the underbelly and the pilot got out a bit later. It took him a little longer than I would expect but he may have tried to secure the plane in a certain manner before exiting. Good job by the pilot overall. YES...about TIME GA gets some good press. Dumb comment on cnn tho about "I guess there was two inside there" The right seater exited first, and the pilot later, probably after verifying everything was secure and master off Uhh...doesnt the PILOT usually sit on the left? ![]() obviously they didnt know dat --Don Don Byrer KJ5KB Radar Tech & Smilin' Commercial Pilot Guy Glider & CFI wannabe kj5kb-at-hotmail.com "I have slipped the surly bonds of earth; now if I can just land without bending the gear..." "Watch out for those doves...smack-smack-smack-smack..." |
#5
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![]() "Don Byrer" wrote: .. It looked like a Cessna 172RG. My thought too...if I read the tail # right it's 9453 8,0, or D 9453D is a 172RG 9453 8 and 0 are 182Q's, so it must be a D (?) Yep, a lot of later 172RGs are N9xxxD; I used to own 9387D. http://tinyurl.com/325kym 9453D is one of the last ones made. -- Dan T-182T at BFM |
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On Fri, 30 Nov 2007 03:16:58 GMT, "news.verizon.net"
wrote: And he said that the pilot had shut the engine down as as was standard procedure. Clearly clueless. and no the engine was running till it hit the ground. This brings up the question: How do you know the engine was running? Just because the prop is turning doesn't mean the engine is running. Typically the prop doesn't stop until well into the roll out even with a dead engine...unless the engine seized. Of course if it's digging into the runway it stops pretty quick unless the engine is developing power. Roger (K8RI) |
#7
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![]() "Roger (K8RI)" wrote in message ... On Fri, 30 Nov 2007 03:16:58 GMT, "news.verizon.net" wrote: And he said that the pilot had shut the engine down as as was standard procedure. Clearly clueless. and no the engine was running till it hit the ground. This brings up the question: How do you know the engine was running? Just because the prop is turning doesn't mean the engine is running. Typically the prop doesn't stop until well into the roll out even with a dead engine...unless the engine seized. Of course if it's digging into the runway it stops pretty quick unless the engine is developing power. You should be able to stop the prop by pulling the mix, and slowing the aircraft to just short of a stall. |
#8
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yea, i would think the pilot would want to stop, rock the prop and get
it horz b4 belly landing....a few bucks here, a few bucks ther...hey, b4 too long it add up...no? On Dec 2, 7:15 pm, "Maxwell" wrote: "Roger (K8RI)" wrote in message ... On Fri, 30 Nov 2007 03:16:58 GMT, "news.verizon.net" wrote: And he said that the pilot had shut the engine down as as was standard procedure. Clearly clueless. and no the engine was running till it hit the ground. This brings up the question: How do you know the engine was running? Just because the prop is turning doesn't mean the engine is running. Typically the prop doesn't stop until well into the roll out even with a dead engine...unless the engine seized. Of course if it's digging into the runway it stops pretty quick unless the engine is developing power. You should be able to stop the prop by pulling the mix, and slowing the aircraft to just short of a stall. |
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On Sun, 2 Dec 2007 20:15:03 -0600, "Maxwell"
wrote: "Roger (K8RI)" wrote in message .. . On Fri, 30 Nov 2007 03:16:58 GMT, "news.verizon.net" wrote: And he said that the pilot had shut the engine down as as was standard procedure. Clearly clueless. and no the engine was running till it hit the ground. This brings up the question: How do you know the engine was running? Just because the prop is turning doesn't mean the engine is running. Typically the prop doesn't stop until well into the roll out even with a dead engine...unless the engine seized. Of course if it's digging into the runway it stops pretty quick unless the engine is developing power. You should be able to stop the prop by pulling the mix, and slowing the aircraft to just short of a stall. I think you will find you would have to pull up and stall in a rather steep attitude to get the prop to stop in many planes. In a well loosened engine on a 150 or 172 it might not stop until well into the roll out. The prop on the Deb with that 260 HP windmills down to some where between 30 and 40 MPH which is well below stall speed. Of course once it's stopped it takes a whale of a lot more speed to get it started again.:-)) Roger (K8RI) |
#10
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On Nov 30, 2:57 pm, "Dan Luke" wrote:
"Don Byrer" wrote: . It looked like a Cessna 172RG. My thought too...if I read the tail # right it's 9453 8,0, or D 9453D is a 172RG 9453 8 and 0 are 182Q's, so it must be a D (?) Yep, a lot of later 172RGs are N9xxxD; I used to own 9387D. http://tinyurl.com/325kym 9453D is one of the last ones made. -- Dan T-182T at BFM Would it be good practice to be sure the doors are unlatched and open a bit before touchdown in a circumstance like this? I'm concerned about there being enough warping to bind the doors in place. |
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