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ORAC
16th Jul 2017, 19:26
Undercarriage selected up with the aircraft settling back down?

aGEXUSvlz2U

dead_pan
16th Jul 2017, 19:59
Good call by the pilot to bang out when he did - that "landing" wasn't going to get any better...

racedo
16th Jul 2017, 20:19
Does he get a Tie ?

Pilot did correct thing, metal cab be bent back into shape, people less so.

Cows getting bigger
16th Jul 2017, 20:39
Does he get a Tie ?

More like a stint in the Gulag.

chevvron
16th Jul 2017, 20:45
I met an ex FAA pilot once. He was taking off in a Martlet and decided to do a similar thing.
Apparently you unlatch a lock and then wind the gear up manually. He unlatched it but there was still a lot of weight on the wheels and the winding handle flew out of his hand as the gear retracted itself!
I also seem to remember a Tornado doing a similar thing a few years back but he got away with it.

megan
16th Jul 2017, 22:59
Belarus M-29 Short FlightA misnaming me thinks, didn't seem to actually get to fly. Perhaps "Extraordinary fast taxi ends in disaster". ;)

Ascend Charlie
17th Jul 2017, 05:04
Also looks like he left the engines running at full noise, it doesn't seem to slow down at all.

Fareastdriver
17th Jul 2017, 08:48
He may well have not realised the undercarriage was retracting as the cockpit was so high and the noise in the back was normal. He probably thought that for some reason the speed hadn't built up enough to get airborne and there was a big orange light in his mirror so he banged out.

charliegolf
17th Jul 2017, 09:56
One of those times when x tonnes of fuel is not a good thing!

CG

IcePaq
17th Jul 2017, 13:15
It's happened before.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MGtU_HWPIcc

MPN11
17th Jul 2017, 13:44
So, experts, is this a design defect? Or Ivan being a bit quick with the UP switch? Or even pre-selected UP and waiting for the weight to come off the mainwheels?

Herod
17th Jul 2017, 14:20
As an old, retired truckie, may I make a suggestion? "Positive climb...gear up"

BEagle
17th Jul 2017, 14:46
If memory serves correctly, on a certain British carrier aeroplane it was possible to lift a safety flap and operate an override button, with the landing gear UP button also pressed in. This would allow instant automatic landing gear retraction when the circuit protection relays detected oleo extension on take-off.

Which was probably OK when performance was limited, you were being flung of the front of one of HM's war canoes and there was only the briny several feet below.

But on a bumpy runway, would anyone risk 'automatic retraction'?

Good to see the excellent K-36 seat saving yet another pilot's life though. I gather it has a 97% success rate.

H Peacock
17th Jul 2017, 16:29
As an old, retired truckie, may I make a suggestion? "Positive climb...gear up"

Yep, that generally works, but you do regularly see some 'heavies' taking much too long to select the gear up! Better safe than sorry, but once you're through 50ft or so select 'Up'.

glad rag
17th Jul 2017, 19:58
That went up well, did it have a centerline tank fitted? glad to see a successful ejection..

ORAC
17th Jul 2017, 20:04
Russian build standards. Jack it up and buff it out....