A Boeing 777-200ER (Reg G-YMMM) has undershot runway 27L at Heathrow today and pretty much crashed in the process.
The aircraft which was inbound from Beijing China to Heathrow UK as British Airways flight BA038 (also reported as BA38) touched down about 300 meters from the threshold on the extended centre line of 27 Left. This was within the airfield boundary but on the cut-grass section before the hard-surface of the runway begins.
The aircraft appears to have touched down with the gear deployed but with sufficient force as to almost immediately collapse the maingear and partially collapse the nosegear. The initial contact marks in the grass indicate the maingear touchdown point and in only 30 meters or so, the engine nacelles contacted the ground and left larger gouge-marks in the grass which obscure any sign of the nosewheel contact point. The aircraft then tracked straight toward the runway threshold for about another 200meters before beginning to turn to the right and coming to a hold roughly adjacent the threshold.
The cabin crew successfully evacuated the aircraft via the inflatable emergency slides which were deployed at all the normal exit doors. Some passengers have been treated for minor injuries. The airfield fire service attended and foamed the area to reduce the risk of fire. The aircraft in it’s final resting position had almost completely collapsed maingear, the undercarriage having apparently pushed up through the latter quarter of the wingroots and disrupted the wingroots and the flaps which were set at an apparently normal angle. Some undercarriage components appear to have separated prior to the aircraft coming to rest. The leading edge slat were also configured for landing. The engine nacelles were disrupted by impact with the ground but the engines themselves remained fully attached but the pylons were pushed upwards. It was impossible to tell from the television images whether reverse thrust had been selected or begun to deploy at any point prior to the engines being damaged.
The airfield was closed for a time due to the airfield fire service being unavailable to support other flights. There is also some apparent damage to the taxiway surface to the North of the 27L threshold. I don’t think the ILS equipment was damaged by the aircraft.
There were eye-witness reports from people on the ground watching the approach. They indicate that the approach was abnormal but the reports are conflicting.
My personal speculation would be that a loss of thrust lead to the undershoot. The cause of the loss of thrust would require investigation. The BBC are currently reporting a ‘unknown’ source quoting the pilot as having said that he experienced a ‘loss of power’ and had to glide in.
There will probably be announcements of the likely cause in due course. A full AAIB report will take much longer although any critical failure of this aircraft design may lead to an early ’special bulletin’ later in the year.
Update: Close examination of television pictures shows that the APU intake door located on the fuselage to the right of the main fin ended up in the open position. The implication being that the APU was air-started in order to provide power which may have been lost from the normal engine-mounted generators. This picture shows a 777 with the APU intake door open. No imagery thus far gives any indication of the position of the Ram Air Turbine(located aft of the starboard maingear) although, if deployed, this would have separated from the aircraft when the gear collapsed.
As an aside, with a landing run of only about 330m, this may be the shortest ever survivable landing run of a Boeing 777.
Naturally getting any useful information from the television news media is nigh-on impossible as they lurch from one newsgasm to the next. I could personally have screamed when they excitedly proclaimed that it had been “confirmed” that this was not a “terrorist-related-incident”. Of course it wasn’t a terrorist incident! Accidents happen all the time and the evil bogey-man doesn’t have a hand in them. In fact, the probability of him having a hand in it is really, really remote so please, TV News, grow up and shut up with the ‘terror angle’. We could also do without television presenters *encouraging* witnesses to relate fear when they clearly weren’t particularly frightened. It ’s a disgusting practice of which so-called ‘journalists’ should be ashamed. You could almost feel the disappointment in the presenters when they were told that there was no panic. </rant>
Photo Credit: Adrian Pingstone
Tags:
27L,
boeing 777,
crash,
heathrow,
uk,
undershoot