"THE CROSS-COUNTRY" by BusyBee604
Another story BusyBee604 has given me to post for him.
Steve
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It was Friday morning 20 November, 1964 when I launched out of NAS Lemoore on a one?plane weekend cross?country. The A/C was A4C Buno 145115. Destination was Westover AFB, in Chicopee Falls, MA with a refueling stop at Offutt AFB in Omaha, NE.
Good WX all the way, the plan was to stop at Offutt, refuel and have lunch with my old squadron-mate LCDR Dick Stratton who was based at Offutt. I would then proceed on to Westover with a scheduled arrival about 8pm where my parents would pick me up then drive to my home in Fairfield, CT to spend the weekend.
The first leg was uneventful as was the lunch. At approximately 1630 hrs, I copied my clearance, switched to departure control and started the takeoff roll. At liftoff, raised the gear/flaps and accelerated to climb speed. A good indication of three gear and flaps up was displayed in the cockpit.
At 500' I received a call on guard frequency from Offutt tower advising me to discontinue the climb and to contact them on tower frequency. I did so and was advised that the tower operator had observed something fall from the aircraft, that I should slow down, return to the field and make a fly?by the tower with gear and flaps down for a visual. I did that (with a good indication of gear\flaps down in the cockpit).
As I flew by the tower, they advised that my port main wheel and strut was missing!!! There was nothing but a stub of a strut barrel on the port side. They then advised that the runway crew had picked up the wheel and strut from the active runway.
Naturally, the next query from the tower was "what are your intentions, sir?" NATOPS (the A4 standardization manual) dictates that with one main gear gone, you must land into short?field arresting gear on a foamed runway or eject, if that setup is not available. I knew that Offutt did not have the arresting gear, so I requested that they let me proceed east as filed and I would figure out where to go. I also knew that Westover was out, most AFBs did not have short?field arresting gear.
I climbed to my cruising flight level, popped in the autopilot and scurried into my enroute supplement to determine where I could land safely. Aha, NAS Floyd Bennett (Brooklyn, NY) had short field gear and I was also aware that they had reserve A4 squadrons there (so I could get parts & maintenance once this thing was on the ground), and had foam available.
I called St. Louis Center and asked to change my destination to Floyd Bennett and asked them to relay my situation to them with a request for a foamed runway at the short?field arresting gear. Also asked them to advise Westover and for their operations to advise my parents to jump in their car and drive to Floyd Bennett to pick me up (about a 120 mile drive).
The FAA air controllers were great all along the route. Over western PA, the sun set and it got dark fast. After a 2 1/2 hour flight, I was advised to start my descent, that Floyd Bennett was ready with the foam layed. I was also advised that NY Center had closed Kennedy airport for 30 min. and had all their arriving aircraft in a holding pattern so that I could be descended
immediately for the emergency landing.
As I made the final approach, I could clearly see the foamed area and the short?field arresting gear. The Coast Guard group at the base had placed a helo in hover at each end of the arresting gear with a huge light from each illuminating the landing area.
The landing was a piece of cake because so many good people including all the FAA controllers, the Floyd Bennett crash crew, the tower, and the Coast Guard had done their jobs perfectly. It amounted to a normal carrier approach, tailhook down. If I missed the arresting gear, it would probably be a cartwheel and disaster. I touched down in the foam about 50' short of the gear. The A/C was starting to swerve left as the hook caught the arresting gear and I slid to a gentle stop still on the port side of the runway.
To make a long story shorter, the only damage was a slightly scraped port drop tank although the whole port landing gear assembly had to be replaced as the stub was ground down quite a bit.
Thank the Lord, my parents did not arrive until about an hour after the landing by which time all the crash equipment had been secured and the A/C was in the hangar. They had no idea of what had occurred, only that Westover Operations had advised them that I had been rerouted to Floyd Bennett and that I had requested them to proceed there to pick me up (that probably saved a couple of potential heart attacks!).
One of the most amazing things about this incident is that the Reserve A-4 squadron had the A/C fully repaired in time for a Sunday
noon departure (luckily, reserves work mostly on weekends). They replaced the port landing gear and drop tank and did all the required drop checks, etc. by Saturday night. I returned on time to Lemoore on Sunday evening with an interesting tale to tell!
Written by: CDR F. Hugh Magee USN (Ret.)