Amazing! the separated bogie found its way to the cargo hanger before the airplane did. Thank you Juan for your excellent and informative aviation videos.
I couldn't get my gear up once flying a Piper Arrow. Cycled the handle, checked the breaker but no bueno. As I'm contemplating a very slow trip back home, I'm running through the system in my head and concluded the safety extension mechanism was keeping me from retracting the gear. I think it uses a combination of manifold pressure and it's own pitot static system to decide if you're on approach without the gear down and drops it for you. So I reached by my right leg to engage the override switch and the gear retracted. The best I could figure is that it had ice somewhere in the system since it was the middle of winter.
As a former maintenance guy who did work on this aircraft type and going from the photos it would appear that the oleo piston itself has failed either during landing or previously during takeoff. From what I could see the right body gear truck was not in its normal tilted position and I speculate that the gear truck was at least partially hanging from the body gear actuators and that might be the reason for the tilt sensors preventing a gear up selection. The lower scissor link below the body gear actuators has clearly broken away from the gear truck and one of the other photos appears to show part of the oleo fractured above the separated gear truck. I think this failure occurred before landing during takeoff rather than during the landing. I would be interested to know if the landing gears had been changed since the incident with the ground vehicle as of course the gears do have a overhaul life. I wouldn’t personally think that much damage could be caused by the collision with the van but I suppose it is possible.
yeah it was definitely hanging lower than the left side. Something had come undone or was broken taking off. Wow it really ripped off and whipped around when that gear touched down! That's not going to buff out or be fixed with speed tape. hindsight says that that side needed a bit more work after the last two events. Thanks for your insight!
Landing gears have hrs and cycles on them. When overhauled they go from x-ray to different classes of NDT. I believe this is a result from a hard landing way before 2010 and landing gear replacement.
If the bogie fails it will result in a forward tilt many times. When it hits the ground it will be ripped away. Cannot tell from this video the exact position of the truck?
Agree. Cargolux does frequently land at or close to MLW, unlike the pax config 747. Our full freighters were maintained by the same maintenance group that also maintained the pax 747, they found that the cargo version does show earlier wear issues like on the flaps, gear etc due to generally higher weights and higher trust settings.
I have overhauled a couple of these, and it could be quite a number of things. . . The question will be, why did the thing let go on landing? Did the body steering mechanism fail to center the bogie after takeoff, did one of the steering actuators fail, thus allowing the bogie to turn (not center out). If the bogie was aligned with the centerline, it would not have sheered off at touchdown. . . then again, the strut was extended visibly longer than its left hand counterpart. The gear’s strut could have cracked allowing the inner strut to extend to the full drag link extension. . . that purple fluid flash at touchdown is the strut fluid as the inner strut literally sheered off the outer sleeve of the strut. I’m sure other camera footage will surface, from tower cams and such, which will be even more awesome. . . damn, I just remembered that I helped deliver a 747 from Boeing to Cargolux back in 2013. It’s good to be retired. . . Watching Juan, Mentor and Kelsey while chilling horizontal on my couch.
Yes I posted same before reading other comments. Strut extended too far after takeoff and was not going back up on landing leading to instant failure and detachment.
Joe, Boeing retiree here, yep good to be done with Boeing. Back on the late 80s and 90s I delivered 19 747s to Cathay Pacific. Those were some good times.
The body gear steering actuators have hydraulic operated locks that activate when the actuators are centred, they should be locked centred before takeoff indeed it is a requirement that the aircraft be taxied forward a short distance to ensure they have locked before takeoff and after the aircraft has entered the runway. If they are not locked centred it will trigger a config warning when takeoff power is selected. I personally doubt they were a factor but I won’t sulk if I’m proven wrong.
There's another video out there closer to the runway threshold that shows that the right body gear was tilted forwards rather than backwards prior to touchdown.
#Captain Kevin: I’ll be looking for that video, very plausible. . . the still pictures show the steering actuators in neutral (centered) but the drag link broke off just below them. . .
Well for those who watch NASCAR, that's 8 lap penalty (2 per wheel) and 8 race suspension (2 per wheel) for 8 crew members (You guess it, 2 per wheel) Jokes aside, let's appreciate Juan's job that basically shows everything we need to know for the people that works on the area and just people that doesn't know anything (like myself) and make everything easy to understand. So good. So well put together. Thank you.
Love your usual in cheek humour re: where the bogey ended after "departure" (not bale out - LOL) separation from the 747. Thanks again for the detailed update. You'll make a pilot out this old "wannbe" yet. Take care, stay well and fly safe. 🤟🏼🖖🏼
The design, engineering, reliability, redundancy and durability of gear retraction and extension is an aviation marvel. Thanks for the abbreviated landing gear ground school.
Great recap of this incident. There were two people using the van to replace runway lights. In CATIII conditions you can only imagine how eerily quiet the runway was, so when they hear a 747 approaching you can also imagine their transition to terror. They both ran off the runway and after the plane passed and landed, returned to the van, drove it off and reported the strike. The Pilots saw the van but never knew they hit it until Tower informed them.
What do those landing gear weight? Yeh, it flew to the convenient place. And I know the ground crew in airports have some risk in their jobs. But that bogie flying is a bit like some TRUCK going airborne.
Thank you Juan. I can’t get enough of your chanel. You have your finger on the pulse of aviation information and on the water levels of our California dams, in good times and in bad. Keep up your fantastic work.
Um… that’s not quite right …. At that point the legs are removed and extensively examined , reconditioned, then put back in service … boeing deliberately built them like a “ brick shithouse “ , and effectively they could live on with no lifespan limitations, if undamaged , and no cracking was found …. Cracking from the inside out though has been a problem in the past .. and is bloody difficult to detect
@@stumackenzie8492 I'm an A&P mechanic that works for a competitor cargo airline, and just changed a gear one week ago due to 10 year life. While yes, the gear post their 10 year life get reconditioned, they do not go back on the same airplane as the time it takes to recondition them would put the plane "down" for much longer then a normal "C-Check" time of 28 days. Everyone always has servicable gear waiting for a quick 2 day swap.
@@hangmann747tinmann8 I assume that's a ton of cycles in 10 years. I've seen car parts last decades with the right owner. But every one of these landings seems to involve a concussion. What other part on a heavy plane takes this much punishment?
Not many people could say they've had a Boeing 747 literally land on their head and live to tell the tale! 😳 Glad everyone was ok in both incidents 😊 Thanks for another excellent video, Juan 💜
I really want to know what the rest of the day was like for the van driver. Did he just sit and stare for a few hours? Imagine almost being crushed by a 747 going 150 knots.
Would love to hear from Captain Joe who flies for Cargolux! Or, maybe he is the one sitting in the office, explaining this whole incident to his boss. ;-) Thanks again for this excellent run-through of events!
Thank you for the way that you explain these events so we can stay on the same page with you. Very interesting. Can't imagine what it was like to have a 747 hit a vehicle. Would certainly scare the stuffing out of me.
The pilots didn't even know they had hit the van; the two maintenance workers, however, apparently heard the plane coming and ran off the side of the runway before the van got hit.
It is interesting that in aviation this wheel assembly is called a bogie. For trains in the UK, it would be called a bogie, but in the US, it would be called a truck.
2010 for the van incident seems like a long time ago, especially for the gear to not have been overhauled since then. These landing gear are made from ultra-high strength steel (250+ksi or close to 300ksi), 4330M or 4340M (modified with silicone to help improve toughness since they can be brittle at those strength levels). New make and reman processes for these types of steels are very specific, these steels are susceptible to hydrogen embrittlement from plating, the formation of over tempered martensite/untempered martensite from abusive grinding, etc...landing gear are highly engineered items on large commercial and military aircraft. Double vacuum melted to be ultra pure too...don't want inclusions or stringers!
@@hoghogwild Boeing used a lot of 4330M and 4340M, Douglas used some 300M. Boeing did go to some Ti on the 777 for some drag link or side struts...don't recall exactly. Brake anti-rotation pins were using Aermet 100 at one point in time. I want to think D6AC was Douglas, but not sure anymore.
@@DillonPrecisionFan I remember that D6AC was/is used on the Space Shuttle now SLS booster cases. Each SLS launch uses 10 steel segments, 5 per booster, 2 boosters per SLS stack. Shuttle used 4 fueled segments per booster, SLS now uses 5 segments per booster. Something like 1200psi peak pressure over a 177feet long, 12 ft diameter average 1/2" thick wall. Peak thrust is 15 seconds post liftoff and 4 million pounds force thrust is achieved per booster. There was 80 segments left over from Shuttle, enough for 8 SLS launches then NASA is switching to a wound filament case. Metalworks is fascinating. Those landing gear take some immense forces, yet must remain light and durable. Amazing stuff.
DPF I used to do sheetmetal repair and we were always warned about getting alodine on high strength steel....which I assume would include the landing gear. We used Alodine as a corrosion protection after grinding the alclad off of aluminum when cleaning corrosion. Back in the day when we did overhaul in-house, there were dozens of us doing all sorts of repairs.....around the clock. I always wondered about whether any alodine accidentally washed down under the fairing panels we worked on and dripped down on the gear. The sfaety data sheet says it like this, "Alodine will cause .....instantaneous hydrogen embrittlement....on contact with high strength steel." Is that true?
@@rael5469 anything acidic is a no-no on high strength steel (160ksi UTS and above). Anything with free hydrogen present. Approved aircraft cleaning agents must pass HE testing...that is why the cleaning agents are all alkaline in nature. Some airlines like D-Limonene (citrus) based degreasers, but have to mask up the LG and other high strength steel components to prevent contact with the acid.
Thank you again Juan. I reckon this shows just how much time & effort the legendary Joe Sutter (R.I.P.) & the others put into DESIGNING FOR SAFETY. The B747 remains epic!
Nice overview Juan. Conjecture only surrounding the untilt etc: but I'd have dumped fuel as well given the multiple threats. As an aside, in normal ops - while both forgiving - I found the B747 easier to grease on than B777 😎
When I see videos like these I am just in awe of what these huge jets are capable of withstanding while still being able to perform a safe landing. That’s some insane damage. Glad the pilots and crew are safe and will be interesting indeed if the damage in 2010 caused this catastrophic failure.
Multiple redundant and fail-safe systems. We must continue to require and demand nothing less, especially in the present age of "simplifiying" designs under guise of cost saving or "environmental preservation". Redundancy is necessary! And, by the way, we still need Reed-Hillview regardless of noise or akr quality talk!
There's no way around, if you want to have the most objective and professional observations on any incident, look for Juan's. Again, thanks Juan. Keep the good reporting on. Not only in aviation.
Wow Juan I bet that van driver needed a change of undies after that he'll how lucky was he that van could have been dragged down the runway like FOD ,as always Mate great content ,were still waiting for a meet and greet here when your in Sydney ,I would fly over from Adelaide any excuse to jump on a Boeing to meet you . Cheers Kym Adelaide
Thanks Juan as you are educating us non flyboys! When this story first broke I wondered why they dumped fuel as I remember you and the pilot sitting in the cabin of that firefighting 747 from a year or so back. Pilot told how that ex-cargo plane didn't care if it was loaded or empty when landing. See we are learning from you!
I can agree with you regarding the robustness of the 747 some years ago I witnessed an overweight landing of a 747-400 at Kai Tak airport in HKG The A/C had departed for Frankfurt and experienced a serious engine fire immediately after take off the captain immediately returned without dumping fuel. Most of the tyres burst due to heavy braking but everything else was OK except for the No2 engine thrust reverse that had disappeared and the hole on the top of the engine combustion section that had caused the fire warning.
They did in fact manage to dump some fuel in the short airborne time available, principally due to the presence of the heavy crew. The limitations of flap selection and fuel dumping made this even more remarkable The crew flew the approach with no landing aids (at night) as it transpired that the flaps had, at that stage, to be cycled through ‘up’ before the FMC would accept any nav/rad inputs - Boeing sorted that within the week! Subsequently a number of C&T crews tried to replicate this ultra quick return in the simulator with an initially un-contained engine fire - but with a singular lack of success … mind you, it is difficult to simulate adrenaline!
As far as I can see, the important illustration from this story is the company loyalty of the bogie even after giving management trouble and being detached from its aircraft. 😊
Thank you very much for picking this incident up!🙂👍 I´m must say I waited for your video about it. Fortunately nobody was hurt - but it is indeed a really serious incident. The departed Bogie coming to a rest just in front of the Cargolux Hangar is a little bit of irony in this case.
There's another video out there of the same incident from a different position along the runway, closer to the runway threshold. As soon as the 747 passes that aircraft, you can see that the right body gear is tilted forwards rather than backwards, kind of like on the 767.
Regarding the lengthy code brown discussion, from the report: "The two maintenance crew, who had been working on the runway center line lights and had become aware of the arriving aircraft by the noise of the engines, ran off the side of the runway upon the increasing sound." So apparently nobody was inside the van. Not to say that it wasn't a code brown event.
The gears are overhauled every 10 years as per the CPCP (Corrosion) program. Usually swapped out with a fresh overhauled unit, so probably not the same gear.
Juan did a video about a Cargolux 747-400 "smash and go" in April 2023. I wonder if that was the same plane. That is a lot more recent than the 2010 incident.
WOW ! Found the video (You Tube has removed the one at your link Juan) and you can see the bogie bouncing off the fuselage as it tears away. Good thing this was a cargo flight because otherwise the maintenance crews would have had A LOT to clean up in a passenger cabin. That noise must have been REALLY loud inside the cabin.
Very nice. I got the emergency alert on FR24 but it of course doesn't detail the nature of the emergency or outcome. Was interesting to note this 747 was in trail of an A380 on the way back to the airport. Must have been a sight to see. We don't get 380s where I am.
Man that van at the end there. Didnt even bust the windshield. In juuust the right spot to get the roof slapped in as a, gentle, but extremely stern warning that someone goofed on procedure in a big way.
Dumping fuel was the most prudent thing to do, the lighter the better and the there was no imminent catastrophic emergency forcing you to land at full gross fuel weight.
For a gear problem, reducing stresses to the component in a failure mode seems prudent (at minimum). If it were an engine or hydraulic issue, dumping the weight would likely be of less benefit.
So amazing to see the video of the bogey (basically the size of a large SUV) bouncing down the runway like a basketball. And then come to rest upright as if nothing happened! Could you imagine having that thing bounce right next to you?
I saw cctv footage of a BP petrol/gas station on the A1 in UK, where a wheel had come loose on the road and had bounced high enough to go right through the sunflower on the overhead BP sign. You couldn't have made a better shot if you had tried.
I can't imagine the shock when the pilots saw that van in the runway (or when the driver of the van saw the 74). Even though nobody was injured, the collision would have resulted in multiple code brown events.
They can't watch out for everything. Especially with this drumbeat about trusting your instruments. Instruments won't say much about ground crews repairing airport features. I can imagine where they could, but I bet they don't. I've heard some airports even have features to scare birds off. Not all, just some.
@@gasdive Same here - not sure what happens with the wing gear when the fuselage gear is turning - I guess they just scrub along. Can you imagine being the guy in the van when you get hit by a 747? And he lived to tell the tale!
Looks like that piston/bogie assembly just fell out which tells me that there was fatigue cracking in the strut, possibly exacerbated by corrosion. Gland nuts and threads are notorious for that. Which begs the question when was the last overhaul and had the gland nut been properly sealed or has there been any work done after overhaul like a seal replacement. Technical records will tell
The amount of energy contained in the severed bogey and wheels must have been immense! I really wonder what damage was caused, it hits the airframe but still contains enough kinetic to bounce it's way all the way down the runway and to the hangar. And these things contain a crap load of mass!
I'm so glad my little citabria isn't so complicated. That cargo company needs to repair that aircraft and use it for marketing. Not always on time but always in one piece.
At 11:15 Juan says the driver was in the van that was hit by the gear, and there were no injuries...but I'd like to add that there was likely a ruined pair of maintenance worker overalls.
I'm curious, if the body bogies steer but the wing bogies don't, why isn't a lot of rubber scraped off of the wing bogie tires in a tight turn on the ground?
I’ve seen this happen on a B737 aircraft. In that case it was a failure of the gland nut that secures the inner member. In fact, the outer member had been reworked to a larger thread and required an over-sized gland nut to fit properly but the original gland nut was installed despite the outer member being identified as reworked by having a yellow ring painted around its lower diameter. On take off, the gland nut failed and the inner member pulled away from the outer member. The pins securing the torque links sheared on landing leaving the wheels, brakes and inner member to bounce along the ground.
Not sure if you've seen or not, but there was another video taken of the landing from further up the runway about where it touched down, and in this video, you can see that the right body gear is tiled downwards with about the same degree of tilt that it should have upwards. Definitely looking forward to see what the investigator's initial findings of this one were, and I agree that they'll probably be looking very closely at the maintenance on this one, especially where it concerns that previous incident over a decade ago.
That -is- WILD! I saw unedited video the day it happened, and still wonder who will get fired for an INTIRE bogey separating! Glad no aircraft were near on "bogey bounce" , and safe stop for aircraft and crew.. unbelievable. 👍🏿
10:40 The damage to the yellow Van looks minor, like if he hit a tree branch at 5mph. When you compare the size and weight of a 747, I don't think that Van hit could do much damage to the landing gear of a 747.
@@insylemis question was do they drag, my guess would be that they are far enough out from center that they mostly just roll with slight dragging. If there was too much dragging they would also steer. Tires are expensive and back then Boeing built things right by the old time engineers...
The wing gears are close to the turning axis on the 747 that means the wing gear trucks can be kept centred by conventional “scissor links” they don’t need to rotate and are indeed prevented from doing so. The body gears are well aft of the turning axis of the aircraft on the ground and therefore need the body gear trucks to rotate to prevent excessive tyre scrubbing. The two body gear steering actuators on each body gear form the upper part of a scissor link system pushing a conventional fixed lower scissor link to push the gear trucks left or right as needed with the oleo forming the pivot. The body gear actuators have an internal hydraulic locking mechanism to hold them centred for straight ahead taxiing, for take off or landing. It is necessary for the crew to taxi the aircraft a short distance forward before applying takeoff power to ensure all four actuators are locked in the centre position, if this does not happen the crew will get a “config” warning. This is needed to prevent the less than desirable situation of the aircraft being steered off the runway during takeoff.
@@jeffeck1701 Think of the wing gear like the back wheels of a really wide tricycle. The analogy works so well, they even have what's call "Tricycle" landing gear
@@insylem Yea, I was overcomplicating things, it's just a standard tricycle setup (no mysteries how that works) with a couple of red-headed stepchildren thrown in where they really don't belong. You have to steer those to allow the nose and wing gear to do their tricycle thing harmoniously.
Amazing! the separated bogie found its way to the cargo hanger before the airplane did. Thank you Juan for your excellent and informative aviation videos.
It knew it had been a bad dog😅
It knew where to go!
Bwaaaaaaaaaaaaa!
In Finland a faulty part on experimental aeroplane of the AF landed in the shelve of the hangar where it was assembled...through the roof.
9:20 - "Remember, a down gear is a happy gear, words to live by Juan!
Yeah, it's in my hot tub after installing a skylight.
I couldn't get my gear up once flying a Piper Arrow. Cycled the handle, checked the breaker but no bueno. As I'm contemplating a very slow trip back home, I'm running through the system in my head and concluded the safety extension mechanism was keeping me from retracting the gear. I think it uses a combination of manifold pressure and it's own pitot static system to decide if you're on approach without the gear down and drops it for you. So I reached by my right leg to engage the override switch and the gear retracted. The best I could figure is that it had ice somewhere in the system since it was the middle of winter.
As a former maintenance guy who did work on this aircraft type and going from the photos it would appear that the oleo piston itself has failed either during landing or previously during takeoff. From what I could see the right body gear truck was not in its normal tilted position and I speculate that the gear truck was at least partially hanging from the body gear actuators and that might be the reason for the tilt sensors preventing a gear up selection. The lower scissor link below the body gear actuators has clearly broken away from the gear truck and one of the other photos appears to show part of the oleo fractured above the separated gear truck. I think this failure occurred before landing during takeoff rather than during the landing. I would be interested to know if the landing gears had been changed since the incident with the ground vehicle as of course the gears do have a overhaul life. I wouldn’t personally think that much damage could be caused by the collision with the van but I suppose it is possible.
I agree. It would have had atleast 1 or 2 D-checks between those two incidencts.
yeah it was definitely hanging lower than the left side. Something had come undone or was broken taking off. Wow it really ripped off and whipped around when that gear touched down! That's not going to buff out or be fixed with speed tape. hindsight says that that side needed a bit more work after the last two events. Thanks for your insight!
Landing gears have hrs and cycles on them. When overhauled they go from x-ray to different classes of NDT.
I believe this is a result from a hard landing way before 2010 and landing gear replacement.
If the bogie fails it will result in a forward tilt many times. When it hits the ground it will be ripped away. Cannot tell from this video the exact position of the truck?
Agree. Cargolux does frequently land at or close to MLW, unlike the pax config 747. Our full freighters were maintained by the same maintenance group that also maintained the pax 747, they found that the cargo version does show earlier wear issues like on the flaps, gear etc due to generally higher weights and higher trust settings.
I have overhauled a couple of these, and it could be quite a number of things. . . The question will be, why did the thing let go on landing? Did the body steering mechanism fail to center the bogie after takeoff, did one of the steering actuators fail, thus allowing the bogie to turn (not center out). If the bogie was aligned with the centerline, it would not have sheered off at touchdown. . . then again, the strut was extended visibly longer than its left hand counterpart. The gear’s strut could have cracked allowing the inner strut to extend to the full drag link extension. . . that purple fluid flash at touchdown is the strut fluid as the inner strut literally sheered off the outer sleeve of the strut. I’m sure other camera footage will surface, from tower cams and such, which will be even more awesome. . . damn, I just remembered that I helped deliver a 747 from Boeing to Cargolux back in 2013. It’s good to be retired. . . Watching Juan, Mentor and Kelsey while chilling horizontal on my couch.
Yes I posted same before reading other comments. Strut extended too far after takeoff and was not going back up on landing leading to instant failure and detachment.
Joe, Boeing retiree here, yep good to be done with Boeing. Back on the late 80s and 90s I delivered 19 747s to Cathay Pacific. Those were some good times.
The body gear steering actuators have hydraulic operated locks that activate when the actuators are centred, they should be locked centred before takeoff indeed it is a requirement that the aircraft be taxied forward a short distance to ensure they have locked before takeoff and after the aircraft has entered the runway. If they are not locked centred it will trigger a config warning when takeoff power is selected. I personally doubt they were a factor but I won’t sulk if I’m proven wrong.
There's another video out there closer to the runway threshold that shows that the right body gear was tilted forwards rather than backwards prior to touchdown.
#Captain Kevin: I’ll be looking for that video, very plausible. . . the still pictures show the steering actuators in neutral (centered) but the drag link broke off just below them. . .
Well for those who watch NASCAR, that's 8 lap penalty (2 per wheel) and 8 race suspension (2 per wheel) for 8 crew members (You guess it, 2 per wheel)
Jokes aside, let's appreciate Juan's job that basically shows everything we need to know for the people that works on the area and just people that doesn't know anything (like myself) and make everything easy to understand. So good. So well put together. Thank you.
You picked a fine time to leave me loose wheel…..
Coffee with Juan. Love the no injury reports
Fabulous video out there.
That 747 is one tough bird.
Love your usual in cheek humour re: where the bogey ended after "departure" (not bale out - LOL) separation from the 747.
Thanks again for the detailed update. You'll make a pilot out this old "wannbe" yet.
Take care, stay well and fly safe. 🤟🏼🖖🏼
Love how you described the wheels as kissing the ground during landing. 😊
The design, engineering, reliability, redundancy and durability of gear retraction and extension is an aviation marvel. Thanks for the abbreviated landing gear ground school.
Cars are too complex for me, making me miss my 1959 Ford Fairlane. These airplanes are something totally different.
Great recap of this incident. There were two people using the van to replace runway lights.
In CATIII conditions you can only imagine how eerily quiet the runway was, so when they hear a 747 approaching you can also imagine their transition to terror.
They both ran off the runway and after the plane passed and landed, returned to the van, drove it off and reported the strike.
The Pilots saw the van but never knew they hit it until Tower informed them.
What do those landing gear weight? Yeh, it flew to the convenient place. And I know the ground crew in airports have some risk in their jobs. But that bogie flying is a bit like some TRUCK going airborne.
This video has been running through my head for a couple days now since I first saw it. Thanks for an outstanding in depth review, as always Juan
Thanks!
Thanks Roderick!
@@blancolirio Always Juan. Keep on trucking. Starting my fireplace now. If I can! Best to you from NL Canada. Rod.
Thank you Juan. I can’t get enough of your chanel. You have your finger on the pulse of aviation information and on the water levels of our California dams, in good times and in bad. Keep up your fantastic work.
Thanks for the detailed explanation of this incident.
There is a 10 year life on 747 gear, the odds of that being the same gear all these years later is extreamly low
Um… that’s not quite right …. At that point the legs are removed and extensively examined , reconditioned, then put back in service … boeing deliberately built them like a “ brick shithouse “ , and effectively they could live on with no lifespan limitations, if undamaged , and no cracking was found …. Cracking from the inside out though has been a problem in the past .. and is bloody difficult to detect
@@stumackenzie8492 I'm an A&P mechanic that works for a competitor cargo airline, and just changed a gear one week ago due to 10 year life. While yes, the gear post their 10 year life get reconditioned, they do not go back on the same airplane as the time it takes to recondition them would put the plane "down" for much longer then a normal "C-Check" time of 28 days. Everyone always has servicable gear waiting for a quick 2 day swap.
@@hangmann747tinmann8 I assume that's a ton of cycles in 10 years. I've seen car parts last decades with the right owner. But every one of these landings seems to involve a concussion. What other part on a heavy plane takes this much punishment?
@@JimMork you are correct, no other part takes the abuse that the gear do. Especially if they do a few HARD landings!
@@hangmann747tinmann8 I'm sure lots of structures flex on landings, but the landing gear are "frontline".
Not many people could say they've had a Boeing 747 literally land on their head and live to tell the tale! 😳 Glad everyone was ok in both incidents 😊 Thanks for another excellent video, Juan 💜
1-2-3 feet lower, and that Yellow Van would have been demolished.
"Hi Honey...I'm going to be late for supper. I had a 747 land on me".
@@raynus1160 🤣🤣🤣
I really want to know what the rest of the day was like for the van driver.
Did he just sit and stare for a few hours?
Imagine almost being crushed by a 747 going 150 knots.
How much you want to bet the van driver had no idea it was coming because he was on his phone?
Thank you for your news report , thankfully no one was hurt. sad we were unable to see the video. my regards liz.
Would love to hear from Captain Joe who flies for Cargolux! Or, maybe he is the one sitting in the office, explaining this whole incident to his boss. ;-)
Thanks again for this excellent run-through of events!
How could something like this be a pilot's fault? Seems more like the maintenance division.
so Joe and Kelsey are BOTH Cargolux? Interesting coincidence. How many UA-cam channels include two aviators flying the same planes?
@@JimMork I don't think Kelsey flies for Cargolux. He used to fly the Dreamlifter though!
@@avgeek-and-fashion Kelsey works for Atlas.
Thank you very much for your opinion on this incident!
Thank you for the way that you explain these events so we can stay on the same page with you. Very interesting. Can't imagine what it was like to have a 747 hit a vehicle. Would certainly scare the stuffing out of me.
The pilots didn't even know they had hit the van; the two maintenance workers, however, apparently heard the plane coming and ran off the side of the runway before the van got hit.
Very interesting stuff. Great vid, yet again. Thanks, Juan.
If Kelsey doesn't weigh in on this you know he was on the plane.
He works for Atlas I thought. Captain Joe works for Cargolux
Hahaha
74 Gear 🤔
The driver was not injured except for his underwear.😅
Best UA-cam aviation comment of the week! 😂
It is interesting that in aviation this wheel assembly is called a bogie. For trains in the UK, it would be called a bogie, but in the US, it would be called a truck.
On a tank it would be called a bogie (in US anyway)
If it's me playing the golf course, it would be called a bogey.
Wow! I am glad that the pilots were able to bring the bird down without any loss of life. Thanks for your report, Juan!
@@timrobinson6573 Birds don't separate from their feet midair.
Great stuff as always. Thanks rom UK.
Thx for the coverage, Juan.
Thank you for covering this.
2010 for the van incident seems like a long time ago, especially for the gear to not have been overhauled since then. These landing gear are made from ultra-high strength steel (250+ksi or close to 300ksi), 4330M or 4340M (modified with silicone to help improve toughness since they can be brittle at those strength levels). New make and reman processes for these types of steels are very specific, these steels are susceptible to hydrogen embrittlement from plating, the formation of over tempered martensite/untempered martensite from abusive grinding, etc...landing gear are highly engineered items on large commercial and military aircraft.
Double vacuum melted to be ultra pure too...don't want inclusions or stringers!
D6AC?
@@hoghogwild Boeing used a lot of 4330M and 4340M, Douglas used some 300M. Boeing did go to some Ti on the 777 for some drag link or side struts...don't recall exactly. Brake anti-rotation pins were using Aermet 100 at one point in time.
I want to think D6AC was Douglas, but not sure anymore.
@@DillonPrecisionFan I remember that D6AC was/is used on the Space Shuttle now SLS booster cases. Each SLS launch uses 10 steel segments, 5 per booster, 2 boosters per SLS stack. Shuttle used 4 fueled segments per booster, SLS now uses 5 segments per booster. Something like 1200psi peak pressure over a 177feet long, 12 ft diameter average 1/2" thick wall. Peak thrust is 15 seconds post liftoff and 4 million pounds force thrust is achieved per booster. There was 80 segments left over from Shuttle, enough for 8 SLS launches then NASA is switching to a wound filament case. Metalworks is fascinating. Those landing gear take some immense forces, yet must remain light and durable. Amazing stuff.
DPF I used to do sheetmetal repair and we were always warned about getting alodine on high strength steel....which I assume would include the landing gear. We used Alodine as a corrosion protection after grinding the alclad off of aluminum when cleaning corrosion. Back in the day when we did overhaul in-house, there were dozens of us doing all sorts of repairs.....around the clock. I always wondered about whether any alodine accidentally washed down under the fairing panels we worked on and dripped down on the gear. The sfaety data sheet says it like this, "Alodine will cause .....instantaneous hydrogen embrittlement....on contact with high strength steel." Is that true?
@@rael5469 anything acidic is a no-no on high strength steel (160ksi UTS and above). Anything with free hydrogen present. Approved aircraft cleaning agents must pass HE testing...that is why the cleaning agents are all alkaline in nature. Some airlines like D-Limonene (citrus) based degreasers, but have to mask up the LG and other high strength steel components to prevent contact with the acid.
Well explained. Never seen a 747 gear have this issue before. Will be interesting to find out the reasons.
Thank you again Juan. I reckon this shows just how much time & effort the legendary Joe Sutter (R.I.P.) & the others put into DESIGNING FOR SAFETY. The B747 remains epic!
Nice overview Juan. Conjecture only surrounding the untilt etc: but I'd have dumped fuel as well given the multiple threats.
As an aside, in normal ops - while both forgiving - I found the B747 easier to grease on than B777 😎
When I see videos like these I am just in awe of what these huge jets are capable of withstanding while still being able to perform a safe landing. That’s some insane damage. Glad the pilots and crew are safe and will be interesting indeed if the damage in 2010 caused this catastrophic failure.
Multiple redundant and fail-safe systems. We must continue to require and demand nothing less, especially in the present age of "simplifiying" designs under guise of cost saving or "environmental preservation". Redundancy is necessary!
And, by the way, we still need Reed-Hillview regardless of noise or akr quality talk!
There may not have been any injuries in that van...but I bet there was a hell of a cleaning bill for the seats.
Hee Hee ha ha !
😅😂
No Depends?
Thank you for your assessments and details!
Was over in Luxembourg a few years back and the fog was so bad it was easy to get lost walking around.
I'm in the process of getting certified on the B747. The queen is a strong lady for sure. I am particularly interested in this investigation.
Happy landings !
I love Juan quotes: "There it goes back to the hanger."
There's no way around, if you want to have the most objective and professional observations on any incident, look for Juan's.
Again, thanks Juan. Keep the good reporting on. Not only in aviation.
Completely agree. His narrative on the snowstorms around Grass Valley where my older brother lives were fascinating, too.
Great job as usual! Steve AA
Nice job on the video and explanation on this incident. Cheers
As usual, Juan rocks it, with news and analysis in this genre. Great channel, and expert explanation here. Cheers.
Thank You Juan for another informative update.
Wow Juan I bet that van driver needed a change of undies after that he'll how lucky was he that van could have been dragged down the runway like FOD ,as always Mate great content ,were still waiting for a meet and greet here when your in Sydney ,I would fly over from Adelaide any excuse to jump on a Boeing to meet you .
Cheers Kym
Adelaide
Juan, Always great, clear and understandable explanations of these unusual aviation incidents. Thanks and look forward to more.
Thanks Juan as you are educating us non flyboys! When this story first broke I wondered why they dumped fuel as I remember you and the pilot sitting in the cabin of that firefighting 747 from a year or so back. Pilot told how that ex-cargo plane didn't care if it was loaded or empty when landing. See we are learning from you!
Thank you sir for this outstanding report. Am an old 707 freighter guy and I didn't know you can steer the body gear. Outstanding!!
Perfect explanations as always! Thx!
I can agree with you regarding the robustness of the 747 some years ago I witnessed an overweight landing of a 747-400 at Kai Tak airport in HKG The A/C had departed for Frankfurt and experienced a serious engine fire immediately after take off the captain immediately returned without dumping fuel. Most of the tyres burst due to heavy braking but everything else was OK except for the No2 engine thrust reverse that had disappeared and the hole on the top of the engine combustion section that had caused the fire warning.
They did in fact manage to dump some fuel in the short airborne time available, principally due to the presence of the heavy crew. The limitations of flap selection and fuel dumping made this even more remarkable
The crew flew the approach with no landing aids (at night) as it transpired that the flaps had, at that stage, to be cycled through ‘up’ before the FMC would accept any nav/rad inputs - Boeing sorted that within the week!
Subsequently a number of C&T crews tried to replicate this ultra quick return in the simulator with an initially un-contained engine fire - but with a singular lack of success … mind you, it is difficult to simulate adrenaline!
Rumor has it that the flight crew was heard singing, "You picked a fine time to leave me loose wheel." shortly after the incident.
As far as I can see, the important illustration from this story is the company loyalty of the bogie even after giving management trouble and being detached from its aircraft. 😊
#1.8k👍👏👏Wow! Did not know the 747 has movable gear like the B-52. A down gear is a happy gear!😂
Thank you very much for picking this incident up!🙂👍 I´m must say I waited for your video about it. Fortunately nobody was hurt - but it is indeed a really serious incident. The departed Bogie coming to a rest just in front of the Cargolux Hangar is a little bit of irony in this case.
That maintenance driver had a lucky escape!
The bogies got to the shop before the rest of the plane 😅
Great analysis Juan!
hi juan----been watching your coverage since I retired---spot on--- Got 22,000 hours and nine types---luv to help if you ever need some
Man, I wouldn't want to be in the way of that!
There's another video out there of the same incident from a different position along the runway, closer to the runway threshold. As soon as the 747 passes that aircraft, you can see that the right body gear is tilted forwards rather than backwards, kind of like on the 767.
ua-cam.com/video/IAfWXCry-gk/v-deo.html Here we see both videos shown so far. Regards from Germany Michael
Regarding the lengthy code brown discussion, from the report: "The two maintenance crew, who had been working on the runway center line lights and had become aware of the arriving aircraft by the noise of the engines, ran off the side of the runway upon the increasing sound." So apparently nobody was inside the van. Not to say that it wasn't a code brown event.
Thanks! ✈
Nice landing ,under less than ideal conditions .
The gears are overhauled every 10 years as per the CPCP (Corrosion) program. Usually swapped out with a fresh overhauled unit, so probably not the same gear.
Juan did a video about a Cargolux 747-400 "smash and go" in April 2023. I wonder if that was the same plane. That is a lot more recent than the 2010 incident.
Not the same aircraft.
WOW ! Found the video (You Tube has removed the one at your link Juan) and you can see the bogie bouncing off the fuselage as it tears away. Good thing this was a cargo flight because otherwise the maintenance crews would have had A LOT to clean up in a passenger cabin. That noise must have been REALLY loud inside the cabin.
Very nice. I got the emergency alert on FR24 but it of course doesn't detail the nature of the emergency or outcome. Was interesting to note this 747 was in trail of an A380 on the way back to the airport. Must have been a sight to see. We don't get 380s where I am.
Man that van at the end there. Didnt even bust the windshield. In juuust the right spot to get the roof slapped in as a, gentle, but extremely stern warning that someone goofed on procedure in a big way.
Dumping fuel was the most prudent thing to do, the lighter the better and the there was no imminent catastrophic emergency forcing you to land at full gross fuel weight.
Adjusting gross weight is the proper term, especially in Europe. Prudent, I'm not sure you're using the correct word, possibly "necessary".
I would expect and want the pilot to dump fuel with main gear issues and international fuel volumes. (Prudent works for me)
The other way is to burn off fuel for an hour or so. That gets the adrenalin down and gives time to make a smooth plan.
For a gear problem, reducing stresses to the component in a failure mode seems prudent (at minimum). If it were an engine or hydraulic issue, dumping the weight would likely be of less benefit.
Sounds like the prudent thing to do! 😊
You learn something new everyday I had no idea that the body gear helped steer the aircraft, but as Juan explained it makes sense👍
No injuries in the van but he did need new underwear.
Thanks for the video.
Joe designed and built the 74s like no other. Nice job getting it on the field and parked fellas!
Very informative…thanks Juan
Thank you, Keep working. Good luck! 👍
So amazing to see the video of the bogey (basically the size of a large SUV) bouncing down the runway like a basketball. And then come to rest upright as if nothing happened! Could you imagine having that thing bounce right next to you?
Having been in the grandstands when a dragster engine, clutch, and differential flew into people near me...why yes, I can. (Anaheim Stadium)
Saw a semi lose a tire on the interstate…they weigh close to 100 lbs…at 70mph…big nope
Ive seen two vehicle accidents where a cargo van tire alone killed occupants in another vehicle it hit. This would be far worse.
I saw cctv footage of a BP petrol/gas station on the A1 in UK, where a wheel had come loose on the road and had bounced high enough to go right through the sunflower on the overhead BP sign. You couldn't have made a better shot if you had tried.
More the size of a subcompact car. But certainly more than the mass of a large SUV
I can't imagine the shock when the pilots saw that van in the runway (or when the driver of the van saw the 74). Even though nobody was injured, the collision would have resulted in multiple code brown events.
They can't watch out for everything. Especially with this drumbeat about trusting your instruments. Instruments won't say much about ground crews repairing airport features. I can imagine where they could, but I bet they don't. I've heard some airports even have features to scare birds off. Not all, just some.
Thank you for another informative video!!
Is this the same aircraft which did the smash and go last month?
Got a tour of the Boeing 777 assembly plant last week. They were producing the freighter version. What an amazing aircraft!
Boeing learned a lot about steerable gear with the B-52...In fact it was once classified...
I didn't know the 747 has steerable mains like the B52.
I wonder why it was never implemented for crosswind takeoff and landing?
@@gasdive Good question, it's just the back pair that are steerable, the wing bogies don't turn.
@@gasdive Same here - not sure what happens with the wing gear when the fuselage gear is turning - I guess they just scrub along. Can you imagine being the guy in the van when you get hit by a 747? And he lived to tell the tale!
@@dermick it's a tale indeed!
Looks like that piston/bogie assembly just fell out which tells me that there was fatigue cracking in the strut, possibly exacerbated by corrosion. Gland nuts and threads are notorious for that. Which begs the question when was the last overhaul and had the gland nut been properly sealed or has there been any work done after overhaul like a seal replacement. Technical records will tell
The amount of energy contained in the severed bogey and wheels must have been immense! I really wonder what damage was caused, it hits the airframe but still contains enough kinetic to bounce it's way all the way down the runway and to the hangar. And these things contain a crap load of mass!
To lose one wheel might be regarded as unfortunate - to lose four sounds like carelessness!
With apologies to Oscar Wilde
I'm so glad my little citabria isn't so complicated. That cargo company needs to repair that aircraft and use it for marketing. Not always on time but always in one piece.
At 11:15 Juan says the driver was in the van that was hit by the gear, and there were no injuries...but I'd like to add that there was likely a ruined pair of maintenance worker overalls.
I'm curious, if the body bogies steer but the wing bogies don't, why isn't a lot of rubber scraped off of the wing bogie tires in a tight turn on the ground?
The wing bogies are closer to the centre of rotation.
The wing gear obviously has a greater radius of turn. ..less scuffing !!
The van driver from the 2010 incident is one of the more lucky people in this world…
I’ve seen this happen on a B737 aircraft. In that case it was a failure of the gland nut that secures the inner member. In fact, the outer member had been reworked to a larger thread and required an over-sized gland nut to fit properly but the original gland nut was installed despite the outer member being identified as reworked by having a yellow ring painted around its lower diameter. On take off, the gland nut failed and the inner member pulled away from the outer member. The pins securing the torque links sheared on landing leaving the wheels, brakes and inner member to bounce along the ground.
I’d put my money on this as the most likely cause👍
Not sure if you've seen or not, but there was another video taken of the landing from further up the runway about where it touched down, and in this video, you can see that the right body gear is tiled downwards with about the same degree of tilt that it should have upwards. Definitely looking forward to see what the investigator's initial findings of this one were, and I agree that they'll probably be looking very closely at the maintenance on this one, especially where it concerns that previous incident over a decade ago.
Wow 9:46 that's pretty late in the approach for the gear, but does make for great footage
Bet the guy in the van never forgot that day! Great explanation of events as always.
Small correction about the Van Incident: The driver was NOT in the Van, he was outside.
Total number of comments at this moment in time: 274
Number which don't talk about van driver's underware: 5
The Locheed C-5 has steerable rear main gear for tight turns.
Oh no! Poor Captain Joe!
That -is- WILD!
I saw unedited video the day it happened, and still wonder who will get fired for an INTIRE bogey separating!
Glad no aircraft were near on "bogey bounce" , and safe stop for aircraft and crew..
unbelievable. 👍🏿
Did the van driver mention if he had to change his diaper after that 747 tagged him?
10:40 The damage to the yellow Van looks minor, like if he hit a tree branch at 5mph. When you compare the size and weight of a 747, I don't think that Van hit could do much damage to the landing gear of a 747.
What do the wing MLG do when you steer the fuselage gear, just slide around? I guess their loading is probably significantly less?
The wing gear stay straight, but the body gear from what I understands stears with the noise
@@insylemis question was do they drag, my guess would be that they are far enough out from center that they mostly just roll with slight dragging. If there was too much dragging they would also steer. Tires are expensive and back then Boeing built things right by the old time engineers...
The wing gears are close to the turning axis on the 747 that means the wing gear trucks can be kept centred by conventional “scissor links” they don’t need to rotate and are indeed prevented from doing so. The body gears are well aft of the turning axis of the aircraft on the ground and therefore need the body gear trucks to rotate to prevent excessive tyre scrubbing. The two body gear steering actuators on each body gear form the upper part of a scissor link system pushing a conventional fixed lower scissor link to push the gear trucks left or right as needed with the oleo forming the pivot. The body gear actuators have an internal hydraulic locking mechanism to hold them centred for straight ahead taxiing, for take off or landing. It is necessary for the crew to taxi the aircraft a short distance forward before applying takeoff power to ensure all four actuators are locked in the centre position, if this does not happen the crew will get a “config” warning. This is needed to prevent the less than desirable situation of the aircraft being steered off the runway during takeoff.
@@jeffeck1701 Think of the wing gear like the back wheels of a really wide tricycle. The analogy works so well, they even have what's call "Tricycle" landing gear
@@insylem Yea, I was overcomplicating things, it's just a standard tricycle setup (no mysteries how that works) with a couple of red-headed stepchildren thrown in where they really don't belong. You have to steer those to allow the nose and wing gear to do their tricycle thing harmoniously.
Another great video covering aviation news!