Ask Captain Lim

Saturday, 11 October 2008
Home arrow Air Crash arrow Is it ever possible for a plane to land so hard that the tail falls off?
Saturday, 11 October 2008
Main Menu
Home
Welcome
Ask Me
Forum
Disclaimer
Privacy
Search
Links
OnLine Stores
Pilot Career
Becoming a Pilot
Female Pilots
Education
Medical Examination
Eyesight
Height
Age
Interviewing Process
Aptitude Tests
Flight Simulator
Flying Schools
Training
Technical Questions
Professional Pilot
General
Licenses & Ratings
A320 Training Videos
Salary
Job Opportunities
Flying
Air Travel
Airways
Ditching
Dr JB Lim's Corner
Emergencies
ETOPS
Fear of Flying
Flying on the Boeing 777
Flying the Plane
Medical
Profession
Aviation
Airlines
Airplanes
Airports
Air Crash
Air Crash Investigations .. --(Not for Fearful Flyers!)
Air Safety
Air Security
Humor
B777 Photo/Routes/Seats
Video
Stories, Truths & Myths
Weather
Air Turbulence
Contrails
Crosswinds
Icings
Lightnings
Night Flights
Thunderstorms
Windshears
Custom Search


Is it ever possible for a plane to land so hard that the tail falls off?
 

By Capt Lim, on 10-01-2006

Favoured : None

Published in : Aviation, Air Safety

Dear Captain Lim,

I am a great fan of flying and am most interested in designs and technology aboard the aircraft. Three things have popped into my mind:

One - is it ever possible for a plane to land so hard that the tail falls off? If so, would it be the pilot*s fault for reversing the engines too early?

Two - can pilots land under a condition that one of the engines is not operating and they have to "shut it off"? It must be hard to have to fight against the constant change in direction, say, if your left engine had failed.

Lastly - I have seen in videos where planes land on one wheel. Is it really common for that to happen?

Thanks

Eric.

Hi Eric,


The undercarriages of planes are designed to be incredibly tough. For instance, on the Boeing 777, very thorough tests had been carried out during the development stage. The plane was subjected to quite dreadful things before being even put to passenger service.

During the test, the plane was loaded up to maximum weight (about 297 tons or 632,500 lbs) by the use of water barrels or bags of sand, making sure that it could fly with a weight far higher than what it would be for normal service. Then they loaded the tail with heavy objects, such as bags of lead to make sure it could fly with all the weight at the back, at the front or at one side. They then tested the plane to see how it would take to the harsh landings. Instead of letting the plane do a normal soft landing, they would just drive it down the runway with a great thump and examined how the structure would react.

These tests were to ensure that, in normal circumstances with passengers where it would not get anywhere near these kinds of situations, the airplane would still be fully controllable and safe to land at. With such stringent tests, if the tail were to fall off, the landing gears would have to collapse first. I wouldn't foresee such an event unless it was a real uncontrolled crash.

Further, early initiation of reverse on the engines would not have any effect or contribute to the "tail falling off". In fact, reversing the engines as soon as the plane touches down is a good pilot technique as it shortens the landing run.

Landing with one engine "shut off" is not unusual as it is designed to be capable of doing so.

Landing on one wheel is not a common thing but it can happen on smaller twin-engine planes. Yes, there is a checklist for pilots in case they are caught in a situation where one of the main landing gear fails to extend. Properly handled, a landing with one gear extended is not a serious emergency.

   
Print
Send to friend
Save this to del.icio.us

Users' Comments  
 
 


Add your comment
Name
Title  
Comment
 
Available characters: 600
 
  This image contains a scrambled text, it is using a combination of colors, font size, background, angle in order to disallow computer to automate reading. You will have to reproduce it to post on my homepage
Enter what you see:

   
   

No comment posted



mXcomment 1.0.8 © 2007-2008 - visualclinic.fr
License Creative Commons - Some rights reserved
< Prev   Next >


Latest Comments
What would the Etihad Cadet...
Etihad Cadet Pilot Programme
Hi sam, May I noe how days did...
02/10/08 More...
By spooks

What would the Etihad Cadet...
Request
I have recently applied for the Etihad...
02/10/08 More...
By tazi

What would the Etihad Cadet...
request
Hi sam, I must tell something about...
01/10/08 More...
By Hassan

ETOPS and CRM queries in a...
bad-karma
but wouldn't you get into the Captain's...
30/09/08 More...
By john

Flying Schools
Student
...
30/09/08 More...
By Nicholas

What would the Etihad Cadet...
Waiting period for Etihad
Hi Sam, Similarly I have applied for...
17/09/08 More...
By Mohd

Why a sailor can have tattoo?...
tatoos can be removed
tatoos now can be removed by laser...
31/08/08 More...
By Dev Kamal

Singapore Airlines Pilots...
Fleet size
Hi Captain Lim, Why is the aircraft...
30/08/08 More...
By YAP

Do I qualify to join...
piloting
pls i need ur urgent advise on pilot...
26/08/08 More...
By jibahmd

Singapore Airlines...
SIA cadet pilot programme india
Dear All, Is SIA planning to come to...
21/08/08 More...
By Lloyd

© 2008 Ask Captain Lim
Joomla! is Free Software released under the GNU/GPL License.