Kansas Kid said:
Kenneth_2003 said:
Only watched on my phone...
No flare, I think so three wheel sets hit at almost the same time. BB will confirm WoW times. Going to watch again to see the control see the surfaces.
Edit to add... There was a bounce and I thought I saw the right wing to dip. Can't tell the angle of the wind from the little bit of blowing snow in the video, but VASAviation had ATC saying it was from 270, or 40* off the right front. Could dip the wing a little, maybe. But that video looked smooth other than the pancake roll up ending
It looks like he landed first on the right wheel which then appears to collapse causing the wing strike and subsequent roll.
Right wheel first would be proper when crabbing into a crosswind. They were landing on 23 so a heading (within rounding) of 230*. THeir nose was pointed SW.
ATC in the Tower reported winds 270 at 23 gusting 33. So 270*, wind was coming from due West at 23 knots gusting to 33 knots.
IF this is sufficient to require significant crabbing you point the nose towards the wind and the strength of the wind keeps pushing you away so you're flying kinda sideways. If you've ever seen a crab walk sideways on the beach, hence the term; crabbing.
Just before touchdown they'll straighten out. But you keep the wingtip on the upwind side just a bit low to keep the wind on top of it. If the wind gets under that wing it can really lift that wing and roll the plane. So that could be why the right main would touch first.
Still gotta flare though. You're trading forward and downward velocity for increased drag with some extra lift to settle the plane gently.
Sidenote... Shorter runways they'll sometimes stick the plane in a little harder when you don't have that extra room to roll out. Longer runways pilots can trade some distance to make it smoother. Crosswinds of course just make it all more difficult.
I'll let one of the pilots here say how "severe" a wind at 40* off the nose is in terms of crabbing etc. 40* on a clock face would be at 1:30.