Thursday, January 29, 2026

No Landing Gear


Tuesday morning, a NASA pilot managed to set down a WB-57 aircraft as  smoothly as you've ever seen at Ellington Airport in Houston after the landing gear failed to deploy. With no brakes, it had to be a butt-puckering experience, but no one was injured. Luckily, the runway was longer than the video. 

The WB-57, also known as the Martin B-57 Canberra, is a superlative plane. The B-57 was the first jet that could cross the Atlantic without refueling, and made the trip in just four hours and 40 minutes in 1951. It was used extensively as a bomber in Vietnam. The WB-57 variant could fly at altitudes up to 62,000 feet. That's why, when the Air Force phased out the plane,  NASA snapped up the remaining three WB-57s in America. They are used for high-altitude research like collecting near-space samples and observing spacecraft launches. Read more about the WB-57 at Ars Technica. (via Fark

4 comments:

Anonymous said...

Jet aircraft in 1851? They've managed to keep that a secret, haven't they?

Anonymous said...

Yep, pretty sure the Wright Brothers would have been shocked

Miss Cellania said...

Oops! Caught again. I'll fix that.

dan gerene said...

The Brits do come up with some amazing planes.