That Time a B-1 Lancer Bomber Survived a Crash Landing. Here's How.

July 14, 2019 Topic: Security Blog Brand: The Buzz Tags: MilitaryTechnologyWorldB-1 Bomber

That Time a B-1 Lancer Bomber Survived a Crash Landing. Here's How.

Amazing. 

Taken at Edwards Air Force Base (AFB), Calif., on Oct. 4, 1989, the impressive photos in this post show a B-1B Lancer from Dyess AFB performing a successful emergency landing on lakebed runway #33. The crew was uninjured and the bomber suffered only slight damage to the underside of the nose.

As reported on that day in a New York Times article, the bomber landed at Edwards AFB after an increasingly desperate 12-hour flight in which the crew struggled unsuccessfully to lower the landing gear in the plane’s nose.

After several hours of efforts to release the gear, the U.S. Air Force (USAF) ordered the crew to fly the plane to Edwards, 60 miles northeast of Los Angeles, where the Rogers Dry Lake bed provided a wide, long natural runway.

Even if at the time officials of the Strategic Air Command (SAC) which operated the bomber fleet, said there had been no prior problems with landing gears, the incident was one of the many problems that plagued the bomber since it went into development in the early 1970’s. In fact three of the 100 planes delivered to USAF by its manufacturer, the Rockwell International Corporation, crashed since the plane went into service in 1985. The plane has also been hampered by fuel leaks, mechanical problems with its variable-geometry wings and shortcomings with its sophisticated defensive systems.

This first appeared in Aviation Geek Club here