Photo by James McGinlay |
Bald tires on the landing gear are never a good thing! — atToronto Billy Bishop Airport.
Not! The main brakes on the plane are the the reverse thrusters on the engines and the spoilers on the wings, not the brakes on the wheels, although to be certified for flight a jet must be able to stop using only the wheel brakes.
Joe Keating
ReplyDeleteBeing allowed that close to the planes landing gear isn't so good either
Robert Roth
Probably zoomed in from terminal window.
Like · More · 7 hours ago
Jim McGinlay
Actually from my window seat on the plane. Now I have more than one reason to sit on the aisle.
Unlike · 1 · 6 hours ago
Joe Keating
Is the window seat on the belly of the plane??? Is it submarine seating.
Unlike · 1 · 6 hours ago
Jim McGinlay
Not a big plane, a puddle jumper from Newark to Toronto. And yes it very low to the ground. Propellers are actually above the fuselage so the cabin is very low.
Unlike · 1 · 6 hours ago
ReplyDeleteJohn Elefante
Jimmy, I wouldn't compare these tires to car tires. In fact most airplane tires are purposely made slick. The slickness is intended to prevent the tire from picking up pebbles and small rocks on the runway surface and them propel it at landing speeds in excess of 100 mph. Those pebbles and rock might put holes in the bottom of the wings and fuselage . Not the best to handle water displacement on a rainy day but overall the better tire.
Unlike · 2 · Yesterday at 2:37pm
Yesterday at 7:44pm
ReplyDeleteJim McGinlay
That does make a lot of sense John if I hadn't seen the two on the other side of the plane. Not deep grooves for sure like you'd see on a car but still a lot more distinguishable treads.
Like · Today at 1:42am
Joe Keating
I got it!!! The runway where you landing it half dirt and half asphalt. So the tires with the tread is for the dirt side. You better pray they don't have it backwards buddy.
Like · Today at 6:46am
Joe: I don't think that is anything to worry about. I never saw any runways built the way you describe and I've traveled all over Asia, Europe, Latin America, The Caribbean and North Africa quite a bit.
Deleteours ago
ReplyDeleteJohn Elefante
keep in mind they store fuel in the wings so a pebble thrown up from a tire might cause a serious problem.
Like · 11 hours ago
John Elefante
A little trivia. Did you know that the tires on aircraft that fly at high altitudes are usually filled with nitrogen? If they were filled with compressed air, that air would freeze at high altitudes.
Like · 11 hours ago
John Elefante
Here is an article that does a nice job of explaining it. http://www.airtransparency.com/airtransparency/2011/9/30/aircraft-tires.html
AirTransparency - Offering an Inside View of Airline Operations - Aircraft Tires
airtransparency.com
Like · 10 hours ago