Belly skin has no directional preferences like wheels do. There's a video on YouTube, taken from the cockpit of an R182, of a gear-up landing. The airplane skids in whatever direction it feels like. The crown of the runway will usually run it off to the side.Man, and not even close to the centerline.
He was "Grass? Pavement? grasspavementgrasspavement...ooh how did that POA thread conclude?"Man, and not even close to the centerline.
Would you have preferred that the news article calls it a "crash" instead of an "awkward landing"?
So let’s say you do that and avoid the prop strike. No tear down of engine?Cessna 172RG: https://www.wmur.com/article/plane-lands-with-gear-up-at-nashua-airport-nobody-injured/28945754
I assume he shut the engine down before landing and made sure the prop was horizontal but who knows
So let’s say you do that and avoid the prop strike. No tear down of engine?
Why shut down the engine? You're trying to save who money, the insurance company? Land with the motor running and give yourself an extra margin of error.
In an accident like this will they rebuild to total out the plane??I agree about margin for error, but that may not have been a factor here as the article doesn't say.
The insurance company only pays for the stuff damaged in the gear up, including a tear down if you have a prop strike. However, the insurance company WILL NOT buy you a new engine or give you a fresh overhaul for a prop strike. The insurance company is only liable for the stuff that is damaged from the prop strike not wear and tear such as your two jugs that were at 65 on the last annual or your cam with the rounded off lobe.
In an accident like this will they rebuild to total out the plane??
Nope. No teardown unless the blades hit something and then it depends on what you hit, how severe, which engine....
"Sudden Engine Stop" is more than pavement and includes water and tall grass ... my mechanic was showing me the FAA criteria as there was a plane I saw that had a " um landing" in water 10 hours after engine replacement, and was NOT inspected and should have been after the "water" landing.
Is "tall" subjective?"Sudden Engine Stop" is more than pavement and includes water and tall grass
Highly!Is "tall" subjective?
So, the blades hit something other than air...
Is "tall" subjective?
Highly!
I "Q-tipped" a prop, and it was perfectly symmetrical. No extra engine vibration! But it didn't pull very well. I still had a tear-down inspection.Agreed, the prop looks short. Perhaps it is curled but you cannot tell from that angle. The side photo in the article is blurred so it is herd to know.