201er Posted May 8 Report Posted May 8 Not sure if this has been discussed but it just made the Aviation 3 minutes of fame: Quote
Echo Posted May 8 Report Posted May 8 Not sure he/she could of hauled that down. Burned a LOT of runway in float. Yikes. Then a go-around with a bent prop and potentially compromised engine. Damn. Quote
kortopates Posted Saturday at 04:32 PM Report Posted Saturday at 04:32 PM I hope all the growing notoriety for the E pilot gets noticed by his FSDO so he can get the needed counseling and remedial training. It just might save his life. Many good pilots would/will do this on their own but you can’t be sure.Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk 1 Quote
Marc_B Posted Saturday at 04:47 PM Report Posted Saturday at 04:47 PM I guess the song is right...maybe you can always go around...even after a gear up! Quote
Schllc Posted Sunday at 09:53 AM Report Posted Sunday at 09:53 AM Aerostar lands gear up, then takes off and flys home. https://www.military.com/video/aircraft/civilian-aircraft/plane-lands-gear-up-then-keeps-flying/4189092003001 Quote
skykrawler Posted Sunday at 12:28 PM Report Posted Sunday at 12:28 PM And then the gear come out on the climb out. Quote
A64Pilot Posted Wednesday at 02:15 PM Report Posted Wednesday at 02:15 PM On 5/11/2025 at 8:28 AM, skykrawler said: And then the gear come out on the climb out. Yeah I’m sure he was overly stressed and not at the top of his game after prop striking the airplane. 1 Quote
goodyFAB Posted yesterday at 02:08 AM Report Posted yesterday at 02:08 AM amazing. you would think you might notice that if your "proficient". Quote
1980Mooney Posted 1 hour ago Report Posted 1 hour ago (edited) On 5/14/2025 at 9:15 AM, A64Pilot said: Yeah I’m sure he was overly stressed and not at the top of his game after prop striking the airplane. 23 hours ago, goodyFAB said: amazing. you would think you might notice that if your "proficient". Well even "proficient" pilots can be distracted at the wrong time. But this apparently is an unfortunate case a new pilot in a newly purchased plane. Gear-up landing Incident Mooney M20E Super 21 N1230X, Thursday 27 March 2025 https://indyairsales.com/__resources/webdata/files/specsheets/1716_N1230X Info Spec Sheet Rev 2.pdf https://www.flightaware.com/live/flight/N1230X This is a 1964 M20E Super 21 with a J-Bar manual landing gear. The owner registered N1230X on November 12, 2024. ADSB-Exchange history shows that the plane showed up at the owner's home drome on October 30, 2024. It appears that the owner is a newly minted pilot, age 47 per the internet : Certificate: PRIVATE PILOT Date of Issue: 10/20/2024 His photo on LinkedIn shows him standing in front a C-172 holding his certificate. The owner came to MooneySpace once. On October 31, 2024 he posted a topic looking for a "Complex Mooney Instructor". He said "My insurance requires that I have 10 hours dual time with an instructor and 10 takeoffs at landings. I've completed 4 hours and 4 takeoff and landings this past week with an instructor who helped me fly the plane home." He got some recommendations for the remaining 6 hours dual and 6 take-offs/landings and never came back to MS. His speed and glide slope/rate of descent don't look terrible. I can't find the METAR for KGAI that day but winds at Dulles were variable and not more than 5 mph. However, his Base to Final was sloppy. He busted the Final and he blew past the centerline before turning back more than 100 degrees to Final. https://globe.adsbexchange.com/?icao=a06145&lat=39.168&lon=-77.145&zoom=14.3&showTrace=2025-03-27&trackLabels×tamp=1743106682 Perhaps he got flustered with the mistake. (or worrying about not banking too much in the correction) Perhaps he was debating balking the landing and going around resulting in a loss of focus on the landing configuration and getting "behind the plane". Perhaps that is why he didn't have the gear down in time well before the flare but put the gear down after "kissing the tarmac" and climbing out. Perhaps his J-Bar is out of rig or bent, like some comment here, and requires tremendous force or binds which hinders his smooth operation (But you would think if that was the problem, his instructor or ferry pilot would have highlighted it as a squawk that needed immediate repair) Edited 48 minutes ago by 1980Mooney Quote
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.