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Glad to hear the damage was no worst that it was, Steve. Distraction is the
single biggest cause of such types of incidents. Its been say of
retractable gears - there are those who have landed gear up and those who
will - so you go yours out of the way early. Its got to be aggravating when
there are other things you want to get fixed. Hope you are back in the air
soon.
Ed
Ed Anderson
RV-6A N494BW Rotary Powered
Matthews, NC
----- Original Message ----- From: "Steve Brooks" <steve@tsisp.com>
To: "Rotary motors in aircraft" <flyrotary@lancaironline.net>
Sent: Sunday, June 06, 2004 12:19 PM
Subject: [FlyRotary] Not my best landing
I made my 6th flight today, and after flying for .8 hours, came in to land
after I noticed that I had a vacuum failure, and did not put the nose gear
down. Talk about running my day, it definitely was not good, but could
have
been much worse.
I was evidently distracted by wondering about what happened to the vacuum,
instead of doing my landing checklist. I was worried that I could have
lost
a belt, so I was keeping a watchful eye on the temperatures. I did,
however, turn on the boost pump, and check fuel. I haven't been used to
having to put the gear down, and coupled with the distraction, and
stupidity, was the formal for a problem.
I came in high and a little on the fast side, in fact, I couldn't figure
out
why I wasn't descending, and bleeding speed. How about the fact that the
gear was up. I was deploying both rudders, and marveling over how well
that
worked to get the altitude problem solved. Apparently the AEX was in the
process of extending the gear when I touched down, which probably saved me
from allot more damage. I landed a little faster than I had been, and sat
it down without letting it float along like all of my other landings. If
I
had landed like I did before, the extra 4 or 5 seconds could have let the
gear get all the way down...but it didn't.
Damage was really no too bad. Ground off the face of the landing gear
strut
about 1/8" ground the front of the castoring nose wheel casting flat in
one
spot, and ground off about half of the hockey puck. As soon as I realized
what had happened, I pulled back all the way on the elevator, and hit the
nose gear switch, which was already turning. The nose came up and I was
still rolling at maybe 20-30 MPH. I pulled off on a taxiway, shut down,
and
got out to inspect the damage. I expected the worst, but really was
pretty
minimal. I decided that everything was good enough to taxi back to the
hanger, where I pulled the nose cover to check for any other damage.
Everything inside looked fine. The nose lift is fine. The landing gear
strut will have to be replaced, as well as the lower casting on the nose
wheel assembly. I may forget allot of things in the future, but I'll bet
that landing gear won't be one of them.
I pulled the engine cowling, and the belt on the smog pump that I use for
vacuum was fine, so I still don't know the cause of the vacuum problem. I
need to pull the canard, and I/P cover anyway to troubleshoot a NAV system
problem, so I'll get to the bottom of it when I do that. I'll have plenty
of time while I'm waiting on parts.
The only damage to the nose at all was a couple of cracks in the micro
around the hockey puck. I'll have to sand it down to get the rest of the
puck off anyways, so that isn't a big deal.
The good news is that my noise in the right main wheel is fixed. I took
it
apart, really didn't find anything, but I repacked the bearings, and put
it
all back together and the noise is gone. I guess that it must have been
an
alignment issue with the disk or something. I was careful to snug the
bolts
with the same torque while mounting the disk to the wheel. I think that
may
have been the issue.
Also the engine continues to run superbly. I still am running warmer than
I
like, but I have a plan to remedy that. The rotary engine is so smooth
and
quiet that you forget it's running almost.
Steve Brooks
Cozy MKIV N75CZ
Turbo rotary
>> Homepage: http://www.flyrotary.com/
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