Checkout_my_Six
Touchdown! Greaser!
Forgetting is the easy part...
The answer is human factors.
I've never landed gear up, I've never had a ground loop, I've never flown into a storm... boy am I knocking on wood right now!What’s that old saying? Oh yeah...
To err is human, to criticize divine.
Namaste.
There is a YT video of a guy, up in Washington state I think, who forgot to put his gear up on his floatplane one day. His young son drowned in the crash. It was gut-wrenching to hear him tell his story. He just got distracted and forgot. Now he has to live with that memory for the rest of his life.....Gear down is not always good:-
Often a worse outcome that gear up in error.
Midfield, gear down. abeam, flaps 1, check gear. flaps 2 on base check gear. final, flaps 3 check gear. short final, check gear. over numbers, check gear. final power reduction, check gear.
I'm paranoid.
...yet.I've never landed gear up, I've never had a ground loop, I've never flown into a storm..
You cant hear the gear warning horn with noise cancelling headsets is how, FAA has a bulletin about that.
Normally pilots have a routine on when and where they lower the gear. Add distractions, break the routine and I can usually have a gear horn screaming at the pilot during a flight check.
Take a plane with an M20J with a rather low volume horn it is quite easy.
Very cheap shot, imo.
There is only one sure way to never have a gear up landing - and that is to never fly a retract.
#itsworkingforme.......
I have, um, Q-tipped a propeller. You aren't going around.I do not have a complex endorsement....But at work on the sims I have never ever thought twice about dropping the gear. I do it out of habit. But the few times I've been in a complex I'm glad the other thought to because it never crossed my mind. I'm thinking forgetting has to do with task saturation maybe.
I wonder if most gear up happen while out of the norm stuff is going down or during a particularly focused approach?
I've been treating my Cherokee like a complex and started verbalizing gear down and locked. Hopefully when I move up to a complex I'll have it engrained in my membrane. But they are accidents and we all do bone headed moves at time.
I figure if I hear the prop hitting the concrete I'll power up and come back around. Then I have the coveted q-tip prop! Haha
How?
We got onto a V tail Bonanza discussion over in the chat room and it reminded me of the V35A that the two owners of my FBO used to have. They ended up selling it to a guy on field and it appears that he (or someone else) had a gear up landing in it down in Muscle Shoals, AL back in 2017. I saw that it was listed on a salvage auction website and evidently someone out of OK bought it.
So it brings up the question, how in H. E. double hockey sticks does someone gear up an airplane? How do you ignore the gear warning horn? Just seems like a total bone-headed move to me.
Except that the vast majority of pilots that fly retracts have not, and never will, land gear up.I have always been told to have this mindset:
There are two types of pilots: Those who have had a gear up landing and those that will...
Just to point out the obvious, the whole purpose of the mindset is to remind the pilot that all of us are fallible and to prevent you from having a gear up...Except that the vast majority of pilots that fly retracts have not, and never will, land gear up.
Hey! I knocked on wood!...yet.
I’m in claims and have seen many, many gear up landings. CFIs, airline captains in their private planes, 10,000 sky gods. The one constant is that it’s never a low time pilot (unless training with a CFI).
The one constant is that it’s never a low time pilot (unless training with a CFI).
Oh. No you didn’t. I was just being an Internet dick. In real life it’s sarcasm but no matter how hard I try I can’t type sarcastically but I refuse to stop trying so I've just accepted that I’m perceived as a dick on the Internet.i must’ve struck a nerve with you on this subject. My apologies.
It happens because of lots of factors. We had a crew a few months ago forget to put the gear up and were wondering why they weren’t accelerating and climbing so slowly.
Several years ago I was a passenger on a Dash 8, sitting behind the wing. I could see the left main tires. I noticed that on climbout the gear was still down, and was still down as the plane leveled off at altitude. I was wondering if I should bring it to someone's attention when I heard and felt a power reduction, followed by the tires disappearing....then power back up to cruise... ooops....
As far as this applies to a v-tail, your first cue should be the plane will not slow down.
Start with not proficient in the airplane. Add in not in the habit of using checklists. Then make 98% of your flights at a quiet uncontrolled field. Then go to a busy towered field that you're nervous about flying into and get a clearance of 'Nxxxx make long straight in rwy x, keep your speed up, jet traffic 6 miles in trail'.
I know of a pilot who played out that kind of scenario. He didn't understand why the stall horn was going off every time he pulled the power back. So he just flew it with partial power down over the numbers, pulled the power and flared. It was very short roll out. He sat staring at the panel wondering how he'd just done what he'd done until he heard a voice outside the plane and look up and saw a fireman in a silver flame suit standing next to the wing asking him if he was ok.
Good point. I could see it happening that way as well.I think you're correct here except the "Start with not proficient in the airplane". Personally, when I'm feeling not proficient, I'm way more vigilant and "sitting up straight and paying attention". It's when I've done this a million times that I get sloppy.
I have, um, Q-tipped a propeller. You aren't going around.