It is also reported to have flown low at low altitude.
You think the bounce to try and knock the gear down?
pretty impressive it stays upright on the center mains
You think the bounce to try and knock the gear down?
I was wondering if the hard landing was intentional. Maybe one of the 747 guys (@Polar742) could comment on the ground shift sensing system and if there would be some concern that it might not work correctly if the right main gear wasn't involved.
Also, the captain was a bad ass and wished the tower (or maybe the crash trucks) a happy new year after things calmed down a bit.
I doubt the bounce was intentional - probably wanted to land firm with the #4 system out (spoilers), and a significant number of breaks hanging half way out the wheel well. I hear bouncing, is pretty easy when you combine that with being overweight.
Rumor has it the plane was in the hanger yesterday trying to fix this problem.
@BobDDuck I don't know how you bounce one. Skip, yes. Bounce, no.
I didn't say anything about a bounce. That was somebody else. My comment was more about the system logic to tell the airplane that it is on the ground. I've flown airplanes that require strut compression and wheel spin up (plus RA and a bunch of other stuff) in order to unlock the reversers and deploy the spoiler panels. With a strut out of the equation I can see making a firm landing to get wheel spin and compression on the other strut to make sure.
Polar742 - Passengers interviewed mentioned the pilot saying they returned because there was a hydraulic issue, from what is being reported they were at FL320 when they decided to return. A guy on Pprune was talking about this not being the first hydraulic 4 system to fail in this manner and from what he saw it looked like that was the culprit. You certainly know far more about it than I do, I am just giving you where I got my tip bits from.
Now, back to dumping all this stuff out of my brain.
I make a pretty mean cup of coffee.