It was circling really low over our house then out to sea to drop fuel for an hour earlier, really glad it got down ok.
Mike
It was circling really low over our house then out to sea to drop fuel for an hour earlier, really glad it got down ok.
Mike
I was just reading this morning about how the aviation industry has suffered some high profile problems/ mishaps/ tragedies and then this happened a few hours later. It actually sounds like this was a success insofar as reacting to a random technical emergency. Congratulations to the people involved, glad all are safe.
(relatively) minor blip affecting UK flight - FRONT PAGE NEWS
flight LOST, presumed crashed and at bottom of ocean on the other side of the world = passingly interesting
Reminds me of the route a taxi driver took me in Hong Kong! Round in circles, then we questioned him after seeing the same place 3 times. He let us out without paying :-)
I'm happy that everything was fine and that no one got hurt, but I am not very happy about my flight back to England being delayed for four hours (so far) because of it. At least there's free WiFi so I can spend the wait drooling over watches!
Spotted it earlier this afternoon and watched the flight land on the flightradar. I flew on this particular plane (B747-443/G-VROM/Barbarella) a couple of times so it's really reassuring to know that all are safe and well. All credit to the crew and ground services!
Oh no...the dreaded 10 wheeled landing. Hardly Cheslea Sullenberger stuff.
Video of the landing here, quite a bounce as it hits the runway!
http://m.youtube.com/watch?v=zLpRu1EzyGE&sns=fb
Good way to test the integrity of the remaining operative main gear but perhaps not the best time.
Great result at the end of the day, and here's also to Boeing for designing and building one hell of an aircraft.
I believe some of the aerial acrobatics earlier were intended to shake the gear loose - a couple of bounces might have been enough to dislodge it. As it turns out, some hydraulics had failed which is why the flaps weren't conventionally set for landing, and the plane was still very heavy as less than half its fuel load would have been burned off in four-odd hours of flying around. So perhaps not the best time but I don't believe anyone had the choice?
...but what do I know; I don't even like watches!
I suppose it makes for a good dramatic news piece / link bait with a nice ending, unlike the other story. I don't think the situation is particularly rare, though. I'm not a frequent flyer but I recall a flight from Tokyo to London having a similar initial issue. We took off, and then seemed to turn back. We had to do the fly past the control tower thing a few times. The entirely calm captain explained that the undercarriage had not retracted properly. Not exactly the thing you want to hear as a passenger on a 13-hour flight.
The flight attendants were all calm, might as well have been talking about the weather. One of the flight officers popped out, walked down the aisle past me, lifted a hatch and then disappeared under the floor somewhere. I asked what he was up to, and was told he was visually checking the undercarriage. Not sure how he did this ? Viewing window ? Someone here will know. It was an Airbus A340. Whatever, he surfaced after a while and we continued doing large loops around Tokyo. Eventually the captain declared the undercarriage retracted, another flyby, and we continued on to London with no further issues. The total lack of drama surrounding all this led me to believe it wasn't uncommon.
Paul
Not hugely uncommon for a primary system to fail. To be in a situation where the gear won't come down at all is a very remote possibility - one in a million.
You are correct, they would be visually checking the gear through little windows - there are usually marks on the undercarriage that align when the gear is down and locked and it's obvious if retracted.
Here's a good insight into how a return following a birdstrike is handled:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9KhZwsYtNDE
and an engine failure:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rEf35NtlBLg
Radio 5 was trying to build the drama yesterday but was completely uncut by everyone they spoke to sounding very calm and "well these things happen" and questions like "did you wonder what was happening?" were answered with "not at all, they kept us informed all of the time".
The B747-400 can dump fuel, so they can get to any landing weight they need to....or stay aloft for a long time.
As long as the aircraft is flying, with no danger of an imminent crash, it pays to fly in circles to see if the flight crew can correct the problem. then if they cannot. calculate the best landing weight, how long to hold the nose up, how much braking etc... Also they get the Boeing tech-reps on the phone to get there technical advice, something like this, where the aircraft is in good flying condition, get the Boeing factory engineers in Seattle at call as well.
They probably had to do a few laps around the Bristol Channel to the get out of the way of other air traffic into Gatwick
Video from the cabin
http://www.liveleak.com/ll_embed?f=5c3e4312a78bPassengers Prepare for Emergency Landing on Virgin Jet
Excellent. A comment which presumably could only be uttered by a "744 driver".
My hat is of to you sir. The ability to land nearly 296,000kgs of 747-400 on all 16 main landing gear wheels without passengers on board is a feat in itself if you are hand flying it, but to land with a 25% reduction in wheels (12 wheels (not 10), from the pictures I've seen) with 450+ souls on board without incident is, I suppose by Sullenberger standards............................pedestrian