When the Landing Gear Doesn’t Come Down

I don’t mean when the pilot forgets to PUT it down, I’m talking about when one or more the landing gear simply won’t come out of the well. Or, they may come out of the well but fail to lock in place. Instances like this are not as rare as you think. The gear could have been damaged on the catapult shot. It could have taken battle damage. A tire blown on take-off may have been retracted into the well and now it won’t come out. There are literally dozens of ways that landing gear can get hung up.

Fortunately, each aircraft has its own way of coping with this emergency. Some involve powerful hydraulic accumulators; some involve compressed air bottles. In the case of the A-4 Skyhawk the solution is simple, just like the rest of the airplane. The landing gear retract forward, and once stowed in the wheel well the hydraulics are depressurized and the gear simply rest on the doors. In an emergency, the pilot pulls a cable that unlocks the gear doors and the landing gear fall into the air stream. Air loads lock the gear down nice and tight.

The pucker factor goes abruptly northward when one of the main gear will not come down. For many fighter-type aircraft this is an ejection situation. History shows that attempting to land with just a nose gear and one main landing gear extended can result in a fireball with loss of both airplane and crew. If the two good landing gear will retract — definitely go for a smooth belly landing!

That’s what happened to the Bluehawk A-4E in these photos. Damage was limited to the two 300-gallon tanks and a little metal on the nose. The airplane flew the next day.

One thought on “When the Landing Gear Doesn’t Come Down

  1. I am a 61 year old female. I was a child during the Vietnam War. I was given a copy of D. D. Smith’s book and I read it twice. I finally really understand what these naval aviators spent their time doing. In great and very entertaining detail, D. D. relives his decorated career. It was hard to put this book down. It’s fascinating to be in the cockpit with this amazing pilot. He’s very fortunate to be alive. A movie should be made about this historic story. Thank you to D. D. Smith for sharing his epic story.

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