seany wrote:gfonk wrote:i just heard about this.
firstly so glad it ended well and massive respect to all the crew.
but only one thing i dont understand, if the plane was departing then why would there have been a problem with the landing gear not deploying? if the landing gear is retracted after take off how did they come to realise there was an issue? woukdnt this have happened when the plane was coming in to land?
Pilots get a 3 green lights when gear's down and locked, lights out when gear's retracted, and red when the gear position disagrees with the levers position. Upon gear retraction the pilots would have had 1 red light and the rest out, thus they'd have been aware of the problem almost immediately after take off.
As the aircraft reached 32,000ft and continued out over the Irish sea I doubt this was an issue with gear retraction. It's more than likely to be a hydraulic system failure which was recognised after the gear had been retracted, and after deliberation with OPS they may have requested the aircraft to return to base.
The risk of the landing gear not deploying properly would of been highlighted to the flight deck, which would be confirmed on gear extension - as has happened in this situation. You can see the crew have manually 'dropped' the landing gear as the panels around the gear have not stowed (which was the cause of the sparks on landing).
Top merits for a great job done by all crew involved.
