On the subject of abnormal landings/procedures .... Does everyone remember this one back in April 1990 (on April 1st of all days) ? ....
SAFE AIR ARGOSY 222 ZK-SAF EMERGENCY LANDING AT WOODBOURNE/BLENHIEM APRIL 1st 1990https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=osNcIqH8X1ISAFE AIR ARGOSY 222 ZK-SAF was on approach to WEL when its crew were confronted with an unsafe port main gear indication.
The approach was abandoned and the crew endeavoured to trouble short the problem .... which included a procedure "not in the book" .... in attempt to force the port main gear down and into a locked condition, but, which also failed.
The decision was therefore made to divert the aircraft to Woodbourne/Blenheim .... SAFE AIR's engineering and operations base .... in order to perform an emergency landing there with a port main gear "UNSAFE" indication.
That approach, and landing, was performed superbly.
Aided by slower than normal approach to landing airspeed and the influence of starboard aileron after landing the crew held the aircraft's full weight off the unsafe port main gear until the last moments of their roll out after landing .... when both physics, and gravity, inevitably resulted in the port main gear slowly collapsing and the aircraft then commencing to off-road/ground loop.
The cause of this incident was "a sheared" locking pin on the port main gear.
This was a common end of life failure among ARGOSY aircraft .... as both the RAF and other UK operators had experienced prior to the NZ incident.
Repair work to ZK-SAF was commenced by SAFE AIR engineering .... and a replacement ARGOSY leased-in from IPEC AUSTRALIA (VH-IPB .... re-registered ZK-SAL) to cover -SAF's schedules .... but .... the repair work was never completed before AIR NZ (SAFE AIR's parent company) announced it's decision to cease SAFE AIR's air freight operations (at the same time also announcing its decision to withdraw its F-27 fleet too) and focus what then remained of the company on aviation engineering.
ARGOSY ZK-SAL was returned to IPEC Aviation on September 26th 1990 .... but not before some high-spirited engineers had "the final say". SAFE AIR staff resentful at parent company AIR NZ's quietly doctored the "SAFE AIR CARGO" titles on ZK-SAL's fuselage overnight to read "SAFE AIR CANGO" .... essentially meaning SAFE AIR CAN GO (down the road/be dispensed with so to speak). Perhaps the last, longest, and loudest laugh occurred though when this particular aircraft was then forced to fly additional domestic air freight services prior to its return to Australia .... whilst still bearing this non-standard/edited titling as a slur against AIR NZ management of the period ....


"MRC FS IMAGES"
A great NZ produced video documentary about SAFE AIR's history .... from BRISTOL FREIGHTER's to ARGOSY's
"THE FINAL FLIGHT"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FDfDYgoXFjYMark C
AKL/NZ