Tantalum
Final Approach
- Joined
- Feb 22, 2017
- Messages
- 9,244
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San_Diego_Pilot
Went back and forth on posting this for a while but figured I'd share
The summary is:
I went out flying in one of our twins, not my beloved Aztec (luckily) for sightseeing with family. Everything nominal, but on approach to the pattern the left main did not come down. Flew several low passes in the pattern while cycling the gear and troubleshooting. Finally declared, attempted the manual extension, and still no luck.. I also learned the value of the Qref checklist I keep which has the emergency tabs very easily organized!
tower was great, my passengers didn't freak out. I didn't freak out. Tower was very helpful in coordinating and visually checking the plane
The whole thing was surreal, it was a beautiful day to fly, and it was weird on my last downwind leg knowing that sometime in the very near future I'd be bending metal. I've never hurt a plane, not so much as scratched one, in 20+ years of flying. So that thought sucked.
The runway is wide, winds were generally light, around 5-10 knots mostly headwind, so elected to land with the nose and right main out. These are three bladed props so left both mills running (A) because I didn't want to make my situation worse pre-emptively killing an engine, and (B) because with it being 3 blades there'd be no way to stop the engine without damaging the props
Touch down was smooth.. and I managed to keep the left wind aloft until it felt like we were virtually stopped.. I'd estimate 20-30 knots at most. The wing came down.. and the plane turned left, but managed to stop with all the but the left wingtip on the runway.
Damage was surprisingly minimal. I killed the engines on touchdown but still got some prop damage on the left engine.. otherwise no fuel leak and all said and done it didn't look too bad
The fault was mechanical, seems a pin came loose somewhere on departure causing one of the bolts to slip out on wheel retraction. Once in the well it pivoted awkwardly resulting in the gear getting physically stuck. Maintenance was able to pull it down by hand on the ground, but it took some pulling and wiggling. I'm thorough on my preflights, especially with the gear, as I never wanted to be one "those guys" who geared up.
So that's that!
The summary is:
I went out flying in one of our twins, not my beloved Aztec (luckily) for sightseeing with family. Everything nominal, but on approach to the pattern the left main did not come down. Flew several low passes in the pattern while cycling the gear and troubleshooting. Finally declared, attempted the manual extension, and still no luck.. I also learned the value of the Qref checklist I keep which has the emergency tabs very easily organized!
tower was great, my passengers didn't freak out. I didn't freak out. Tower was very helpful in coordinating and visually checking the plane
The whole thing was surreal, it was a beautiful day to fly, and it was weird on my last downwind leg knowing that sometime in the very near future I'd be bending metal. I've never hurt a plane, not so much as scratched one, in 20+ years of flying. So that thought sucked.
The runway is wide, winds were generally light, around 5-10 knots mostly headwind, so elected to land with the nose and right main out. These are three bladed props so left both mills running (A) because I didn't want to make my situation worse pre-emptively killing an engine, and (B) because with it being 3 blades there'd be no way to stop the engine without damaging the props
Touch down was smooth.. and I managed to keep the left wind aloft until it felt like we were virtually stopped.. I'd estimate 20-30 knots at most. The wing came down.. and the plane turned left, but managed to stop with all the but the left wingtip on the runway.
Damage was surprisingly minimal. I killed the engines on touchdown but still got some prop damage on the left engine.. otherwise no fuel leak and all said and done it didn't look too bad
The fault was mechanical, seems a pin came loose somewhere on departure causing one of the bolts to slip out on wheel retraction. Once in the well it pivoted awkwardly resulting in the gear getting physically stuck. Maintenance was able to pull it down by hand on the ground, but it took some pulling and wiggling. I'm thorough on my preflights, especially with the gear, as I never wanted to be one "those guys" who geared up.
So that's that!