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Landing gear
Landing gear
from Wikipedia

The retractable main landing gear of a Boeing 747

Landing gear is the undercarriage of an aircraft or spacecraft that is used for taxiing, takeoff or landing. For aircraft, it is generally needed for all three of these. It was also formerly called alighting gear by some manufacturers, such as the Glenn L. Martin Company. For aircraft, Stinton[1] makes the terminology distinction undercarriage (British) = landing gear (US).[2]

For aircraft, the landing gear supports the craft when it is not flying, allowing it to take off, land, and taxi without damage. Wheeled landing gear is the most common, with skis or floats needed to operate from snow/ice/water and skids for vertical operation on land. Retractable undercarriages fold away during flight, which reduces drag, allowing for faster airspeeds. Landing gear must be strong enough to support the aircraft and its design affects the weight, balance and performance.[3] It often comprises three wheels, or wheel-sets, giving a tripod effect.

Some unusual landing gear have been evaluated experimentally. These include: no landing gear (to save weight), made possible by operating from a catapult cradle and flexible landing deck:[4] air cushion (to enable operation over a wide range of ground obstacles and water/snow/ice);[5] tracked (to reduce runway loading).[6]

For launch vehicles and spacecraft landers, the landing gear usually only supports the vehicle on landing and during subsequent surface movement, and is not used for takeoff.

Given their varied designs and applications, there exist dozens of specialized landing gear manufacturers. The three largest are Safran Landing Systems, Collins Aerospace (part of Raytheon Technologies) and Héroux-Devtek.

Aircraft

[edit]

The landing gear represents 2.5 to 5% of the maximum takeoff weight (MTOW) and 1.5 to 1.75% of the aircraft cost, but 20% of the airframe direct maintenance cost. A suitably designed wheel can support 30 t (66,000 lb), tolerate a ground speed of 300 km/h and roll a distance of 500,000 km (310,000 mi) ; it has a 20,000 hours time between overhaul and a 60,000 hours or 20 year life time.[7]

Gear arrangements

[edit]

Wheeled undercarriages normally come in two types:

  • Conventional landing gear or "taildragger", where there are two main wheels towards the front of the aircraft and a single, much smaller, wheel or skid at the rear. The same helicopter arrangement is called tricycle tailwheel.[8]
  • Tricycle landing gear, where there are two main wheels (or wheel assemblies) under the wings and a third smaller wheel in the nose. PZL.37 Łoś Was the first bomber aircraft with twin wheels on a single shock absorber. The same helicopter arrangement is called tricycle nosewheel.

The taildragger arrangement was common during the early propeller era, as it allows more room for propeller clearance. Most modern aircraft have tricycle undercarriages. Taildraggers are considered harder to land and take off (because the arrangement is usually unstable, that is, a small deviation from straight-line travel will tend to increase rather than correct itself), and usually require special pilot training. A small tail wheel or skid/bumper may be added to a tricycle undercarriage to prevent damage to the underside of the fuselage if over-rotation occurs on take-off leading to a tail strike. Aircraft with tail-strike protection include the B-29 Superfortress, Boeing 727 trijet and Concorde. Some aircraft with retractable conventional landing gear have a fixed tailwheel. Hoerner estimated the drag of the Bf 109 fixed tailwheel and compared it with that of other protrusions such as the pilot's canopy.[9]

A third arrangement (known as tandem or bicycle) has the main and nose gear located fore and aft of the center of gravity (CG) under the fuselage with outriggers on the wings. This is used when there is no convenient location on either side of the fuselage to attach the main undercarriage or to store it when retracted. Examples include the Lockheed U-2 spy plane and the Harrier jump jet. The Boeing B-52 uses a similar arrangement, except that the fore and aft gears each have two twin-wheel units side by side.

Quadricycle gear is similar to bicycle but with two sets of wheels displaced laterally in the fore and aft positions. Raymer[10] classifies the B-52 gear as quadricycle. The experimental Fairchild XC-120 Packplane had quadricycle gear located in the engine nacelles to allow unrestricted access beneath the fuselage for attaching a large freight container.[11]

Helicopters use skids, pontoons or wheels depending on their size and role.

Retractable gear

[edit]
Retraction of the landing gear of a Boeing 727 after take-off

To decrease drag in flight, undercarriages retract into the wings and/or fuselage with wheels flush with the surrounding surface, or concealed behind flush-mounted doors; this is called retractable gear. If the wheels do not retract completely but protrude partially exposed to the airstream, it is called a semi-retractable gear.

Most retractable gear is hydraulically operated, though some is electrically operated or even manually operated on very light aircraft. The landing gear is stowed in a compartment called a wheel well.

Pilots confirming that their landing gear is down and locked refer to "three greens" or "three in the green.", a reference to the electrical indicator lights (or painted panels of mechanical indicator units) from the nosewheel/tailwheel and the two main gears. Blinking green lights or red lights indicate the gear is in transit and neither up and locked or down and locked. When the gear is fully stowed up with the up-locks secure, the lights often extinguish to follow the dark cockpit philosophy; some airplanes have gear up indicator lights.[12]

Redundant systems are used to operate the landing gear and redundant main gear legs may also be provided so the aircraft can be landed in a satisfactory manner in a range of failure scenarios. The Boeing 747 was given four separate and independent hydraulic systems (when previous airliners had two) and four main landing gear posts (when previous airliners had two). Safe landing would be possible if two main gear legs were torn off provided they were on opposite sides of the fuselage.[13] In the case of power failure in a light aircraft, an emergency extension system is always available. This may be a manually operated crank or pump, or a mechanical free-fall mechanism which disengages the uplocks and allows the landing gear to fall under gravity.

Shock absorbers

[edit]

Aircraft landing gear includes wheels equipped with solid shock absorbers on light planes, and air/oil oleo struts on larger aircraft.

Large aircraft

[edit]
Wheel arrangements of large airliners
Front Landing Gear of the Boeing 767

As aircraft weights have increased more wheels have been added and runway thickness has increased to keep within the runway loading limit. The Zeppelin-Staaken R.VI, a large German World War I long-range bomber of 1916, used eighteen wheels for its undercarriage, split between two wheels on its nose gear struts, and sixteen wheels on its main gear units—split into four side-by-side quartets each, two quartets of wheels per side—under each tandem engine nacelle, to support its loaded weight of almost 12 t (26,000 lb).

Multiple "tandem wheels" on an aircraft—particularly for cargo aircraft, mounted to the fuselage lower sides as retractable main gear units on modern designs—were first seen during World War II, on the experimental German Arado Ar 232 cargo aircraft, which used a row of eleven "twinned" fixed wheel sets directly under the fuselage centerline to handle heavier loads while on the ground.[14] Many of today's large cargo aircraft use this arrangement for their retractable main gear setups, usually mounted on the lower corners of the central fuselage structure.

The prototype Convair XB-36 had most of its weight on two main wheels, which needed runways at least 22 in (56 cm) thick. Production aircraft used two four-wheel bogies, allowing the aircraft to use any airfield suitable for a B-29.[15]

A relatively light Lockheed JetStar business jet, with four wheels supporting 44,000 lb (20 t), needed a 10 in (25 cm) thick flexible asphalt pavement. The 210,000 lb (95 t) Boeing 727-200 with four tires on two legs main landing gears required a 20 in (51 cm) thick pavement. The thickness rose to 25 in (64 cm) for a McDonnell Douglas DC-10-10 with 443,000 lb (201 t) supported on eight wheels on two legs. The heavier, 558,000 lb (253 t), DC-10-30/40 were able to operate from the same thickness pavements with a third main leg for ten wheels, like the first Boeing 747-100, weighing 700,000 lb (320 t) on four legs and 16 wheels. The similar-weight Lockheed C-5, with 24 wheels, needs an 18 in (46 cm) pavement.[16]

The twin-wheel unit on the fuselage centerline of the McDonnell Douglas DC-10-30/40 was retained on the MD-11 airliner and the same configuration was used on the initial 275 t (606,000 lb) Airbus A340-200/300, which evolved in a complete four-wheel undercarriage bogie for the heavier 380 t (840,000 lb) Airbus A340-500/-600.[17][18] The up to 775,000 lb (352 t) Boeing 777 has twelve main wheels on two three-axles bogies, like the later Airbus A350.

The 575 t (1,268,000 lb) Airbus A380 has a four-wheel bogie under each wing with two sets of six-wheel bogies under the fuselage.[19] The 640 t (1,410,000 lb) Antonov An-225, the largest cargo aircraft, had 4 wheels on the twin-strut nose gear units like the smaller Antonov An-124, and 28 main gear wheels.[20] The 97 t (214,000 lb) A321neo has a twin-wheel main gear inflated to 15.7 bar (228 psi),[21] while the 280 t (620,000 lb) A350-900 has a four-wheel main gear inflated to 17.1 bar (248 psi).[22]

STOL aircraft

[edit]

STOL aircraft have a higher sink-rate requirement if a carrier-type, no-flare landing technique has to be adopted to reduce touchdown scatter. For example, the Saab 37 Viggen, with landing gear designed for a 5m/sec impact, could use a carrier-type landing and HUD to reduce its scatter from 300 m to 100m.[23]

The de Havilland Canada DHC-4 Caribou used long-stroke legs to land from a steep approach with no float.[24]

Operation from water

[edit]

A flying boat has a lower fuselage with the shape of a boat hull giving it buoyancy. Wing-mounted floats or stubby wing-like sponsons are added for stability. Sponsons are attached to the lower sides of the fuselage.

A floatplane has two or three streamlined floats. Amphibious floats have retractable wheels for land operation.

An amphibious aircraft or amphibian usually has two distinct landing gears, namely a "boat" hull/floats and retractable wheels, which allow it to operate from land or water.

Beaching gear is detachable wheeled landing gear that allows a non-amphibious floatplane or flying boat to be maneuvered on land. It is used for aircraft maintenance and storage and is either carried in the aircraft or kept at a slipway. Beaching gear may consist of individual detachable wheels or a cradle that supports the entire aircraft. In the former case, the beaching gear is manually attached or detached with the aircraft in the water; in the latter case, the aircraft is maneuvered onto the cradle.

Helicopters are able to land on water using floats or a hull and floats.

For take-off a step and planing bottom are required to lift from the floating position to planing on the surface. For landing a cleaving action is required to reduce the impact with the surface of the water. A vee bottom parts the water and chines deflect the spray to prevent it damaging vulnerable parts of the aircraft. Additional spray control may be needed using spray strips or inverted gutters. A step is added to the hull, just behind the center of gravity, to stop water clinging to the afterbody so the aircraft can accelerate to flying speed. The step allows air, known as ventilation air, to break the water suction on the afterbody.[25] Two steps were used on the Kawanishi H8K.[26] A step increases the drag in flight. The drag contribution from the step can be reduced with a fairing. A faired step was introduced on the Short Sunderland III.[27]

One goal of seaplane designers was the development of an open ocean seaplane capable of routine operation from very rough water. This led to changes in seaplane hull configuration. High length/beam ratio hulls and extended afterbodies improved rough water capabilities.[28] A hull much longer than its width also reduced drag in flight.[29] An experimental development of the Martin Marlin, the Martin M-270, was tested with a new hull with a greater length/beam ratio of 15 obtained by adding 6 feet to both the nose and tail.[29] Rough-sea capability can be improved with lower take-off and landing speeds because impacts with waves are reduced. The Shin Meiwa US-1A is a STOL amphibian with blown flaps and all control surfaces. The ability to land and take-off at relatively low speeds of about 45 knots and the hydrodynamic features of the hull, long length/beam ratio[30] and inverted spray gutter for example, allow operation in wave heights of 15 feet.[31] The inverted gutters channel spray to the rear of the propeller discs.[32]

Low speed maneuvring is necessary between slipways and buoys and take-off and landing areas. Water rudders are used on seaplanes ranging in size from the Republic RC-3 Seabee to the Beriev A-40[33] Hydro flaps were used on the Martin Marlin[34] and Martin SeaMaster. Hydroflaps, submerged at the rear of the afterbody, act as a speed brake or differentially as a rudder. A fixed fin, known as a skeg, has been used for directional stability. A skeg, was added to the second step on the Kawanishi H8K flying boat hull.[35]

High speed impacts in rough water between the hull and wave flanks may be reduced using hydro-skis which hold the hull out of the water at higher speeds. Hydro skis replace the need for a boat hull and only require a plain fuselage which planes at the rear. Alternatively skis with wheels can be used for land-based aircraft which start and end their flight from a beach or floating barge. Hydro-skis with wheels were demonstrated as an all-purpose landing gear conversion of the Fairchild C-123, known as the Panto-base[36] Stroukoff YC-134. A seaplane designed from the outset with hydro-skis was the Convair F2Y Sea Dart prototype fighter. The skis incorporated small wheels, with a third wheel on the fuselage, for ground handling.

In the 1950s hydro-skis were envisaged as a ditching aid for large piston-engined aircraft.[37] Water-tank tests done using models of the Lockheed Constellation, Douglas DC-4 and Lockheed Neptune concluded that chances of survival and rescue would be greatly enhanced by preventing critical damage associated with ditching.[38]

Shipboard operation

[edit]

The landing gear on fixed-wing aircraft that land on aircraft carriers have a higher sink-rate requirement because the aircraft are flown onto the deck with no landing flare. Other features are related to catapult take-off requirements for specific aircraft. For example, the Blackburn Buccaneer was pulled down onto its tail-skid to set the required nose-up attitude. The naval McDonnell Douglas F-4 Phantom II in UK service needed an extending nosewheel leg to set the wing attitude at launch.[39]

The landing gear for an aircraft using a ski-jump on take-off is subjected to loads of 0.5g which also last for much longer than a landing impact.[40]

Helicopters may have a deck-lock harpoon to anchor them to the deck.[41]

In-flight use

[edit]

Some aircraft have a requirement to use the landing-gear as a speed brake.

Flexible mounting of the stowed main landing-gear bogies on the Tupolev Tu-22R raised the aircraft flutter speed to 550 kn (1,020 km/h). The bogies oscillated within the nacelle under the control of dampers and springs as an anti-flutter device.[42]

Gear common to different aircraft

[edit]

Some experimental aircraft have used gear from existing aircraft to reduce program costs. The Martin-Marietta X-24 lifting body used the nose/main gear from the North American T-39 / Northrop T-38 and the Grumman X-29 from the Northrop F-5 / General Dynamics F-16.[43]

Other types

[edit]

Skids

[edit]
North American X-15 with rear skids
Rockwell HiMAT

Skids has been used on aircraft landing gear. The North American X-15 used skids as the rear landing gear and the Rockwell HiMAT used them in testing.

Skis

[edit]
Wheel-skis

When an airplane needs to land on surfaces covered by snow, the landing gear usually consists of skis or a combination of wheels and skis.

Detachable

[edit]
Me 163B Komet with its two-wheel takeoff "dolly" in place

Some aircraft use wheels for takeoff and jettison them when airborne for improved streamlining without the complexity, weight and space requirements of a retraction mechanism. The wheels are sometimes mounted onto axles that are part of a separate "dolly" (for main wheels only) or "trolley" (for a three-wheel set with a nosewheel) chassis. Landing is done on skids or similar simple devices (fixed or retractable). The SNCASE Baroudeur used this arrangement.

Historical examples include the "dolly"-using Messerschmitt Me 163 Komet rocket fighter,[44] the Messerschmitt Me 321 Gigant troop glider, and the first eight "trolley"-using prototypes[45] of the Arado Ar 234 jet reconnaissance bomber. The main disadvantage to using the takeoff dolly/trolley and landing skid(s) system on German World War II aircraft—intended for a sizable number of late-war German jet and rocket-powered military aircraft designs—was that aircraft would likely be scattered all over a military airfield after they had landed from a mission, and would be unable to taxi on their own to an appropriately hidden "dispersal" location, which could easily leave them vulnerable to being shot up by attacking Allied fighters. A related contemporary example are the wingtip support wheels ("pogos") on the Lockheed U-2 reconnaissance aircraft, which fall away after take-off and drop to earth; the aircraft then relies on titanium skids on the wingtips for landing.[citation needed]

Rearwards and sideways retraction

[edit]
A Royal Air Force P-47 with its raked-forward main gear, and rearward-angled main wheel position (when retracted) indicated by the just-visible open wheel door

Some main landing gear struts on World War II aircraft, in order to allow a single-leg main gear to more efficiently store the wheel within either the wing or an engine nacelle, rotated the single gear strut through a 90° angle during the rearwards-retraction sequence to allow the main wheel to rest "flat" above the lower end of the main gear strut, or flush within the wing or engine nacelles, when fully retracted. Examples are the Curtiss P-40, Vought F4U Corsair, Grumman F6F Hellcat, Messerschmitt Me 210 and Junkers Ju 88. The Aero Commander family of twin-engined business aircraft also shares this feature on the main gears, which retract aft into the ends of the engine nacelles. The rearward-retracting nosewheel strut on the Heinkel He 219[46] and the forward-retracting nose gear strut on the later Cessna Skymaster similarly rotated 90 degrees as they retracted.[citation needed]

On most World War II single-engined fighter aircraft (and even one German heavy bomber design) with sideways retracting main gear, the main gear that retracted into the wings was raked forward in the "down" position for better ground handling, with a retracted position that placed the main wheels at some distance aft of their position when downairframe—this led to a complex angular geometry for setting up the "pintle" angles at the top ends of the struts for the retraction mechanism's axis of rotation. with some aircraft, like the P-47 Thunderbolt and Grumman Bearcat, even mandating that the main gear struts lengthened as they were extended to give sufficient ground clearance for their large four-bladed propellers. One exception to the need for this complexity in many WW II fighter aircraft was Japan's famous Zero fighter, whose main gear stayed at a perpendicular angle to the centerline of the aircraft when extended, as seen from the side.

Variable axial position of main wheels

[edit]

The main wheels on the Vought F7U Cutlass could move 20 inches between a forward and aft position. The forward position was used for take-off to give a longer lever-arm for pitch control and greater nose-up attitude. The aft position was used to reduce landing bounce and reduce risk of tip-back during ground handling.[47]

Tandem layout

[edit]
Hawker Siddeley Harrier GR7. Tandem undercarriage with extra support wheels under wings.

The tandem or bicycle layout is used on the Hawker Siddeley Harrier, which has two main-wheels behind a single nose-wheel under the fuselage and a smaller wheel near the tip of each wing. On second generation Harriers, the wing is extended past the outrigger wheels to allow greater wing-mounted munition loads to be carried, or to permit wing-tip extensions to be bolted on for ferry flights.[48]

A tandem layout was evaluated by Martin using a specially-modified Martin B-26 Marauder (the XB-26H) to evaluate its use on Martin's first jet bomber, the Martin XB-48. This configuration proved so manoeuvrable that it was also selected for the B-47 Stratojet.[49] It was also used on the U-2, Myasishchev M-4, Yakovlev Yak-25, Yak-28 and Sud Aviation Vautour. A variation of the multi tandem layout is also used on the B-52 Stratofortress which has four main wheel bogies (two forward and two aft) underneath the fuselage and a small outrigger wheel supporting each wing-tip. The B-52's landing gear is also unique in that all four pairs of main wheels can be steered. This allows the landing gear to line up with the runway and thus makes crosswind landings easier (using a technique called crab landing). Since tandem aircraft cannot rotate for takeoff, the forward gear must be long enough to give the wings the correct angle of attack during takeoff. During landing, the forward gear must not touch the runway first, otherwise the rear gear will slam down and may cause the aircraft to bounce and become airborne again.[50]

Crosswind landing accommodation

[edit]
The "castoring" main gear arrangement on a Blériot XI

One very early undercarriage incorporating castoring for crosswind landings was pioneered on the Bleriot VIII design of 1908. It was later used in the much more famous Blériot XI Channel-crossing aircraft of 1909 and also copied in the earliest examples of the Etrich Taube. In this arrangement the main landing gear's shock absorption was taken up by a vertically sliding bungee cord-sprung upper member. The vertical post along which the upper member slid to take landing shocks also had its lower end as the rotation point for the forward end of the main wheel's suspension fork, allowing the main gear to pivot on moderate crosswind landings.[citation needed]

Manually adjusted main-gear units on the B-52 can be set for crosswind take-offs. It rarely has to be used from SAC-designated airfields which have major runways in the predominant strongest wind direction.[51] The Lockheed C-5 Galaxy has swivelling 6-wheel main units for crosswind landings and castoring rear units to prevent tire scrubbing on tight turns.[52]

"Kneeling" gear

[edit]

Both the nosegear and the wing-mounted main landing gear of the World War II German Arado Ar 232 cargo/transport aircraft were designed to kneel. This made it easier to load and unload cargo, and improved taxiing over ditches and on soft ground.[53]

Some early U.S. Navy jet fighters were equipped with "kneeling" nose gear consisting of small steerable auxiliary wheels on short struts located forward of the primary nose gear, allowing the aircraft to be taxied tail-high with the primary nose gear retracted. This feature was intended to enhance safety aboard aircraft carriers by redirecting the hot exhaust blast upwards, and to reduce hangar space requirements by enabling the aircraft to park with its nose underneath the tail of a similarly equipped jet. Kneeling gear was used on the North American FJ-1 Fury[54] and on early versions of the McDonnell F2H Banshee, but was found to be of little use operationally, and was omitted from later Navy fighters.[55]

The nosewheel on the Lockheed C-5,[56] partially retracts against a bumper to assist in loading and unloading of cargo using ramps through the forward, "tilt-up" hinged fuselage nose while stationary on the ground. The aircraft also tilts backwards.[57] The Messier twin-wheel main units fitted to the Transall and other cargo aircraft can tilt forward or backward as necessary.[58]

The Boeing AH-64 Apache helicopter is able to kneel to fit inside the cargo hold of a transport aircraft and for storage.[59]

Tail support

[edit]

Aircraft landing gear includes devices to prevent fuselage contact with the ground by tipping back when the aircraft is being loaded. Some commercial aircraft have used tail props when parked at the gate.[60] The Douglas C-54 had a critical CG location which required a ground handling strut.[61] The Lockheed C-130 and Boeing C-17 Globemaster III use ramp supports.[62]

Unladen Il-62 resting on its extended tail strut

The unladen CG of the rear-engined Ilyushin IL-62 is aft of the main gear due to design decisions stemming from efforts to reduce overall weight, systems complexity and drag; to prevent the fuselage from tilting back when unloaded, the aircraft has a unique fully retractable vertical tail strut with castering wheels to allow towing or pushback. The strut is not intended for taxiing or flight, when the weight of the crew, passengers, cargo and fuel provide the necessary fore-aft balance.[63]

Monowheel

[edit]
A Schleicher ASG 29 glider shows its monowheel landing gear

To minimize drag, modern gliders usually have a single wheel, retractable or fixed, centered under the fuselage, which is referred to as monowheel gear or monowheel landing gear. Monowheel gear is also used on some powered aircraft, where drag reduction is a priority, such as the Europa Classic. Much like the Me 163 rocket fighter, some gliders from prior to the Second World War used a take-off dolly that was jettisoned on take-off; these gliders then landed on a fixed skid.[64] This configuration is necessarily accompanied with a taildragger.

Helicopters

[edit]

Light helicopters use simple landing skids to save weight and cost. The skids may have attachment points for wheels so that they can be moved for short distances on the ground. Skids are impractical for helicopters weighing more than four tons. Some high-speed machines have retractable wheels, but most use fixed wheels for their robustness, and to avoid the need for a retraction mechanism.[65]

Tailsitter

[edit]
A Convair XFY Pogo showing its landing gear

Experimental tailsitter aircraft use landing gear located in their tails for VTOL operation.

Light aircraft

[edit]

For light aircraft a type of landing gear which is economical to produce is a simple wooden arch laminated from ash, as used on some homebuilt aircraft. A similar arched gear is often formed from spring steel. The Cessna Airmaster was among the first aircraft to use spring steel landing gear. The main advantage of such gear is that no other shock-absorbing device is needed; the deflecting leaf provides the shock absorption.[citation needed]

Folding gear

[edit]
Ju 288 V1 first prototype, showing its complex "folding" main undercarriage

The limited space available to stow landing gear has led to many complex retraction mechanisms, each unique to a particular aircraft. An early example, the German Bomber B combat aircraft design competition winner, the Junkers Ju 288, had a complex "folding" main landing gear unlike any other aircraft designed by either Axis or Allied sides in the war: its single oleo strut was only attached to the lower end of its Y-form main retraction struts, handling the twinned main gear wheels, and folding by swiveling downwards and aftwards during retraction[66] to "fold" the maingear's length to shorten it for stowage in the engine nacelle it was mounted in.[67] However, the single pivot-point design also led to numerous incidents of collapsed maingear units for its prototype airframes.

Tracked

[edit]

Increased contact area can be obtained with very large wheels, many smaller wheels or track-type gear. Tracked gear made by Dowty was fitted to a Westland Lysander in 1938 for taxi tests, then a Fairchild Cornell and a Douglas Boston.[68] Bonmartini, in Italy, fitted tracked gear to a Piper Cub in 1951.[69] Track-type gear was also tested using a C-47, C-82 and B-50. A much heavier aircraft, an XB-36, was made available for further tests, although there was no intention of using it on production aircraft. The stress on the runway was reduced to one third that of the B-36 four-wheel bogie.[70][71]

Experimental tracked gear on a B-36 Peacemaker

Ground carriage

[edit]

Ground carriage is a long-term (after 2030) concept of flying without landing gear. It is one of many aviation technologies being proposed to reduce greenhouse gas emissions.[72] Leaving the landing gear on the ground reduces weight and drag. Leaving it behind after take-off was done for a different reason, i.e. with military objectives, during World War II using the "dolly" and "trolley" arrangements of the German Me 163B rocket fighter and Arado Ar 234A prototype jet recon-bomber.

Steering

[edit]

There are several types of steering. Taildragger aircraft may be steered by rudder alone (depending upon the prop wash produced by the aircraft to turn it) with a freely pivoting tail wheel, or by a steering linkage with the tail wheel, or by differential braking (the use of independent brakes on opposite sides of the aircraft to turn the aircraft by slowing one side more sharply than the other). Aircraft with tricycle landing gear usually have a steering linkage with the nosewheel (especially in large aircraft), but some allow the nosewheel to pivot freely and use differential braking and/or the rudder to steer the aircraft, like the Cirrus SR22.

Some aircraft require that the pilot steer by using rudder pedals; others allow steering with the yoke or control stick. Some allow both. Still others have a separate control, called a tiller, used for steering on the ground exclusively.[citation needed]

Rudder

[edit]

When an aircraft is steered on the ground exclusively using the rudder, it needs a substantial airflow past the rudder, which can be generated either by the forward motion of the aircraft or by propeller slipstream. Rudder steering requires considerable practice to use effectively. Although it needs airflow past the rudder, it has the advantage of not needing any friction with the ground, which makes it useful for aircraft on water, snow or ice.[citation needed]

Direct

[edit]
The nose gear tiller is visible as a semi-circular manual control to the left of the yoke in this photo of a Boeing 727 cockpit.

Some aircraft link the yoke, control stick, or rudder directly to the wheel used for steering. Manipulating these controls turns the steering wheel (the nose wheel for tricycle landing gear, and the tail wheel for taildraggers). The connection may be a firm one in which any movement of the controls turns the steering wheel (and vice versa), or it may be a soft one in which a spring-like mechanism twists the steering wheel but does not force it to turn. The former provides positive steering but makes it easier to skid the steering wheel; the latter provides softer steering (making it easy to overcontrol) but reduces the probability of skidding. Aircraft with retractable gear may disable the steering mechanism wholly or partially when the gear is retracted.[citation needed]

Differential braking

[edit]

Differential braking depends on asymmetric application of the brakes on the main gear wheels to turn the aircraft. For this, the aircraft must be equipped with separate controls for the right and left brakes (usually on the rudder pedals). The nose or tail wheel usually is not equipped with brakes. Differential braking requires considerable skill. In aircraft with several methods of steering that include differential braking, differential braking may be avoided because of the wear it puts on the braking mechanisms. Differential braking has the advantage of being largely independent of any movement or skidding of the nose or tailwheel.[citation needed]

Tiller

[edit]

A tiller in an aircraft is a small wheel or lever, sometimes accessible to one pilot and sometimes duplicated for both pilots, that controls the steering of the aircraft while it is on the ground. The tiller may be designed to work in combination with other controls such as the rudder or yoke. In large airliners, for example, the tiller is often used as the sole means of steering during taxi, and then the rudder is used to steer during takeoff and landing, so that both aerodynamic control surfaces and the landing gear can be controlled simultaneously when the aircraft is moving at aerodynamic speeds.[citation needed]

Tires and wheels

[edit]
Two mechanics replacing a main landing gear wheel on a Lockheed P-3 Orion
Luftwaffe groundcrew servicing a Heinkel He 177A's main-gear wheels and tires, February 1944

The specified selection criterion, e.g., minimum size, weight, or pressure, are used to select suitable tires and wheels from manufacturer's catalog and industry standards found in the Aircraft Yearbook published by the Tire and Rim Association, Inc.[73]

Gear loading

[edit]

The choice of the main wheel tires is made on the basis of the static loading case. The total main gear load is calculated assuming that the aircraft is taxiing at low speed without braking:[74]

where is the weight of the aircraft and and are the distance measured from the aircraft's center of gravity(cg) to the main and nose gear, respectively.

The choice of the nose wheel tires is based on the nose wheel load during braking at maximum effort:[74]

where is the lift, is the drag, is the thrust, and is the height of aircraft cg from the static groundline. Typical values for on dry concrete vary from 0.35 for a simple brake system to 0.45 for an automatic brake pressure control system. As both and are positive, the maximum nose gear load occurs at low speed. Reverse thrust decreases the nose gear load, and hence the condition results in the maximum value:[74]

To ensure that the rated loads will not be exceeded in the static and braking conditions, a seven percent safety factor is used in the calculation of the applied loads.

Inflation pressure

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Provided that the wheel load and configuration of the landing gear remain unchanged, the weight and volume of the tire will decrease with an increase in inflation pressure.[74] From the flotation standpoint, a decrease in the tire contact area will induce a higher bearing stress on the pavement which may reduce the number of airfields available to the aircraft. Braking will also become less effective due to a reduction in the frictional force between the tires and the ground. In addition, the decrease in the size of the tire, and hence the size of the wheel, could pose a problem if internal brakes are to be fitted inside the wheel rims. The arguments against higher pressure are of such a nature that commercial operators generally prefer the lower pressures in order to maximize tire life and minimize runway stress. To prevent punctures from stones Philippine Airlines had to operate their Hawker Siddeley 748 aircraft with pressures as low as the tire manufacturer would permit.[75] However, too low a pressure can lead to an accident as in the Nigeria Airways Flight 2120.

A rough general rule for required tire pressure is given by the manufacturer in their catalog. Goodyear for example advises the pressure to be 4% higher than required for a given weight or as fraction of the rated static load and inflation.[76]

Tires of many commercial aircraft are required to be filled with nitrogen, and not subsequently diluted with more than 5% oxygen, to prevent auto-ignition of the gas which may result from overheating brakes producing volatile vapors from the tire lining.[77]

Naval aircraft use different pressures when operating from a carrier and ashore. For example, the Northrop Grumman E-2 Hawkeye tire pressures are 260 psi (1.8 MPa) on ship and 210 psi (1.4 MPa) ashore.[78] En-route deflation is used in the Lockheed C-5 Galaxy to suit airfield conditions at the destination but adds excessive complication to the landing gear and wheels[79]

Future developments

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Airport community noise is an environmental issue which has brought into focus the contribution of aerodynamic noise from the landing gear. A NASA long-term goal is to confine aircraft objectional noise to within the airport boundary. During the approach to land the landing gear is lowered several miles from touchdown and the landing gear is the dominant airframe noise source, followed by deployed highlift devices. With engines at a reduced power setting on the approach it is necessary to reduce airframe noise to make a significant reduction to total aircraft noise.[80][81] The addition of add-on fairings is one approach for reducing the noise from the landing gear with a longer term approach to address noise generation during initial design.[82]

Airline specifications require an airliner to reach up to 90,000 take-offs and landings and roll 500,000 km on the ground in its lifetime. Conventional landing gear is designed to absorb the energy of a landing and does not perform well at reducing ground-induced vibrations in the airframe during landing ground roll, taxi and take-off. Airframe vibrations and fatigue damage can be reduced using semi-active oleos which vary damping over a wide range of ground speeds and runway quality.

Accidents

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JetBlue Airways Flight 292, an Airbus A320, making an emergency landing on runway 25L at Los Angeles International Airport in 2005 after the front landing gear malfunctioned
All Nippon Airways Flight 1603, a Bombardier Dash 8 Q400, resting on its nose at Kōchi Airport after its nose gear failed to deploy prior to landing, 13 March 2007

Malfunctions or human errors (or a combination of these) related to retractable landing gear have been the cause of numerous accidents and incidents throughout aviation history. Distraction and preoccupation during the landing sequence played a prominent role in the approximately 100 gear-up landing incidents that occurred each year in the United States between 1998 and 2003.[83] A gear-up landing, also known as a belly landing, is an accident that results from the pilot forgetting to lower the landing gear, or being unable to do so because of a malfunction. Although rarely fatal, a gear-up landing can be very expensive if it causes extensive airframe/engine damage. For propeller-driven aircraft a prop strike may require an engine overhaul.

Some aircraft have a stiffened fuselage underside or added features to minimize structural damage in a wheels-up landing. When the Cessna Skymaster was converted for a military spotting role (the O-2 Skymaster), fiberglass railings were added to the length of the fuselage; they were adequate to support the aircraft without damage if it was landed on a grassy surface.[citation needed]

The Bombardier Dash 8 is notorious for its landing gear problems. There were three incidents involved, all of them involving Scandinavian Airlines, flights SK1209, SK2478, and SK2867. This led to Scandinavian retiring all of its Dash 8s. The cause of these incidents was a locking mechanism that failed to work properly. This also caused concern for the aircraft for many other airlines that found similar problems, Bombardier Aerospace ordered all Dash 8s with 10,000 or more hours to be grounded, it was soon found that 19 Horizon Airlines Dash 8s had locking mechanism problems, so did 8 Austrian Airlines planes, this did cause several hundred flights to be canceled.[citation needed]

On September 21, 2005, JetBlue Airways Flight 292 successfully landed with its nose gear turned 90 degrees sideways, resulting in a shower of sparks and flame after touchdown.[84]

On November 1, 2011, LOT Polish Airlines Flight LO16 successfully belly landed at Warsaw Chopin Airport due to technical failures; all 231 people on board escaped without injury.[85]

Emergency extension systems

[edit]

In the event of a failure of the aircraft's landing gear extension mechanism a backup is provided. This may be an alternate hydraulic system, a hand-crank, compressed air (nitrogen), pyrotechnic or free-fall system.[86]

A free-fall or gravity drop system uses gravity to deploy the landing gear into the down and locked position. To accomplish this the pilot activates a switch or mechanical handle in the cockpit, which releases the up-lock. Gravity then pulls the landing gear down and deploys it. Once in position the landing gear is mechanically locked and safe to use for landing.[87]

Ground resonance in rotorcraft

[edit]

Rotorcraft with fully articulated rotors may experience a dangerous and self-perpetuating phenomenon known as ground resonance, in which the unbalanced rotor system vibrates at a frequency coinciding with the natural frequency of the airframe, causing the entire aircraft to violently shake or wobble in contact with the ground.[88][89] Ground resonance occurs when shock is continuously transmitted to the turning rotors through the landing gear, causing the angles between the rotor blades to become uneven; this is typically triggered if the aircraft touches the ground with forward or lateral motion, or touches down on one corner of the landing gear due to sloping ground or the craft's flight attitude.[88][89] The resulting violent oscillations may cause the rotors or other parts to catastrophically fail, detach, or strike other parts of the airframe; this can destroy the aircraft in seconds and critically endanger persons unless the pilot immediately initiates a takeoff or closes the throttle and reduces rotor pitch.[88][89] Ground resonance was cited in 34 National Transportation Safety Board incident and accident reports in the United States between 1990 and 2008.[88]

Rotorcraft with fully articulated rotors typically have shock-absorbing landing gear designed to prevent ground resonance; however, poor landing gear maintenance and improperly inflated tires may contribute to the phenomenon.[88] Helicopters with skid-type landing gear are less prone to ground resonance than those with wheels.[89]

Stowaways

[edit]

Unauthorized passengers have been known to stowaway on larger aircraft by climbing a landing gear strut and riding in the compartment meant for the wheels. There are extreme dangers to this practice, with numerous deaths reported. Dangers include a lack of oxygen at high altitude, temperatures well below freezing, crush injury or death from the gear retracting into its confined space, and falling out of the compartment during takeoff or landing.[90]

Spacecraft

[edit]

Launch vehicles

[edit]
Falcon 9 descending, just after landing legs were extended, May 2017
Starhopper

Landing gear has traditionally not been used on the vast majority of launch vehicles, which take off vertically and are destroyed on falling back to earth. With some exceptions for suborbital vertical-landing vehicles (e.g., the Masten Xoie or Armadillo Aerospace's Lunar Lander Challenge vehicle), or for spaceplanes that use the vertical takeoff, horizontal landing (VTHL) approach (e.g., the Space Shuttle orbiter, or the USAF X-37), landing gear have been largely absent from orbital vehicles during the early decades since the advent of spaceflight technology, when orbital space transport has been the exclusive preserve of national-monopoly governmental space programs.[91] Each spaceflight system through 2015 had relied on expendable boosters to begin each ascent to orbital velocity.

Advances during the 2010s in private space transport, where new competition to governmental space initiatives has emerged, have included the explicit design of landing gear into orbital booster rockets. SpaceX has initiated and funded a multimillion-dollar reusable launch system development program to pursue this objective. As part of this program, SpaceX built, and flew eight times in 2012–2013, a first-generation test vehicle called Grasshopper with a large fixed landing gear in order to test low-altitude vehicle dynamics and control for vertical landings of a near-empty orbital first stage.[92][93] A second-generation test vehicle called F9R Dev1 was built with extensible landing gear. The prototype was flown four times—with all landing attempts successful—in 2014 for low-altitude tests before being self-destructed for safety reasons on a fifth test flight due to a blocked engine sensor port.[94][95]

The orbital-flight version of the test vehicles–Falcon 9 and Falcon Heavy—includes a lightweight, deployable landing gear for the booster stage: a nested, telescoping piston on an A-frame. The total span of the four carbon fiber/aluminum extensible landing legs[96][97] is approximately 18 metres (60 ft), and weigh less than 2,100 kilograms (4,600 lb); the deployment system uses high-pressure helium as the working fluid.[98] The first test of the extensible landing gear was successfully accomplished in April 2014 on a Falcon 9 returning from an orbital launch and was the first successful controlled ocean soft touchdown of a liquid-rocket-engine orbital booster.[99][100] After a single successful booster recovery in 2015, and several in 2016, the recovery of SpaceX booster stages became routine by 2017. Landing legs had become an ordinary operational part of orbital spaceflight launch vehicles.

The newest launch vehicle under development at SpaceX—the Starship—is expected to have landing legs on its first stage called Super Heavy[101] like Falcon 9 but also has landing legs on its reusable second stage, a first for launch vehicle second stages. The first prototype of StarshipStarhopper, built in early 2019—had three fixed landing legs with replaceable shock absorbers.[102] In order to reduce mass of the flight vehicle and the payload penalty for a reusable design, the long-term plan is for Super Heavy to land directly back at the launch site on special ground equipment that is part of the launch mount.[101]

Landers

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Spacecraft designed to land safely on extraterrestrial bodies such as the Moon or Mars are known as either legged landers (for example the Apollo Lunar Module) or pod landers (for example Mars Pathfinder) depending on their landing gear. Pod landers are designed to land in any orientation after which they may bounce and roll before coming to rest at which time they have to be given the correct orientation to function. The whole vehicle is enclosed in crushable material or airbags for the impacts and may have opening petals to right it.[103]

Features for landing and movement on the surface were combined in the landing gear for the Mars Science Laboratory.[104]

For landing on low-gravity bodies landing gear may include hold-down thrusters, harpoon anchors and foot-pad screws, all of which were incorporated in the design of comet-lander Philae for redundancy.[105]

In the case of Philae, however, both harpoons and the hold-down thruster failed, resulting in the craft bouncing before landing for good at a non-optimal orientation.[106]

See also

[edit]

References

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[edit]
Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Landing gear, also known as undercarriage, is the principal support system of an aircraft, spacecraft, or certain ground vehicles when in contact with the land or water, absorbing the impact of touchdown while enabling mobility. In ground vehicles such as semi-trailers, it refers to retractable legs that support the front end when detached from the towing vehicle. In aircraft, it typically consists of wheels, struts, and shock-absorbing mechanisms that dissipate kinetic energy from landing forces, protecting the airframe and ensuring safe operations on various surfaces. The primary functions of aircraft landing gear include supporting the aircraft's weight during ground operations, providing directional control through steering systems, and integrating with braking mechanisms to decelerate after landing. Shock absorption is achieved via oleo struts, which use a combination of hydraulic oil, compressed air or nitrogen, and sometimes springs to convert vertical and lateral landing loads into heat and manageable forces. Wheels are usually filled with nitrogen to maintain pressure stability across varying altitudes and temperatures, with larger aircraft employing multiple wheels per strut for load distribution. Common configurations include tricycle gear, featuring two main gear legs aft of the center of gravity and a forward steerable nose wheel for enhanced stability and visibility during takeoff and landing, and tailwheel or conventional gear, with two main wheels forward and a smaller tail wheel that positions the propeller higher off the ground but requires more pilot skill for handling. Specialized types, such as floats for amphibious operations on water or skis for snow and ice, adapt the gear to non-runway environments while maintaining core support and absorption roles. Landing gear may be fixed, remaining extended for simplicity in light aircraft, or retractable, folding into the fuselage or wings to reduce drag during flight, often powered by hydraulic, electric, or pneumatic systems. Materials for aircraft landing gear construction prioritize strength and durability, commonly including high-strength steel for struts, aluminum alloys for lighter components, titanium for high-performance applications, and composites in modern designs to reduce weight without compromising integrity. Design considerations, such as ground clearance for engines and propellers, directly influence gear length and positioning, ensuring safe operations across mission profiles from general aviation to commercial airliners. Safety features like mechanical downlocks, position indicators, and overload protection are integral to prevent failures during critical phases.

Aircraft landing gear

Basic configurations

Landing gear serves as the primary interface between an aircraft and the ground, supporting the full weight of the aircraft during takeoff, landing, and all ground operations such as taxiing and towing. It must withstand high dynamic loads during impact, typically up to three times the aircraft's static weight, while maintaining structural integrity and enabling controlled movement. The design prioritizes stability, with configurations arranged to ensure a three-point contact with the surface for balanced support. Fixed landing gear represents the simplest and most common configuration for light aircraft, remaining extended at all times without retraction mechanisms. This setup offers advantages in simplicity of design, reduced weight, lower manufacturing and maintenance costs, and reliability due to fewer moving parts. Two primary fixed gear types are the taildragger (conventional) and tricycle arrangements. In the taildragger configuration, two main gear struts are positioned forward of the center of gravity, with a smaller tail wheel at the rear, creating a three-point stance that angles the fuselage tail-low. This design enhances propeller clearance for rough-field operations and reduces drag in low-speed flight compared to some tricycle setups, though it demands more pilot skill for ground handling to avoid ground loops. The tricycle configuration, by contrast, places two main gear under the wings or fuselage aft of the center of gravity and a nose wheel forward, resulting in a level fuselage attitude on the ground for easier loading, visibility, and braking without nosing over. It is prevalent in general aviation due to improved stability and ease of use. Basic gear arrangements vary by aircraft size and mission, starting with single main gear for ultralight or historical designs, where one central strut supports the primary load, often paired with a tail or nose wheel. Twin main gear, the standard for most fixed-wing aircraft, uses two parallel struts—one under each wing or both under the fuselage—for better load sharing and track width stability. Tail gear positions the third wheel at the empennage for conventional setups, while nose gear locates it forward under the cockpit in tricycle layouts, optimizing weight distribution and propeller ground clearance. Load distribution principles dictate that the main gear bears approximately 90% of the aircraft's static weight, with the nose or tail gear handling the remainder, to minimize stress on forward components and enhance directional stability. Axle placements are typically located longitudinally aft of the center of gravity in tricycle designs, often by 5-15% of the wheelbase to ensure stability; for example, the main axles are offset laterally by 5-10 feet for track width, distributing loads evenly across dual wheels if present. This setup allows the nose gear to steer while the mains provide primary support. A representative example is the Cessna 172 Skyhawk's tricycle gear, featuring twin main gear with tubular spring-steel struts attached to fuselage forgings below the wings, exhibiting a camber angle of 2° to 4° and toe-in of 0° to 0.18 inches for optimal tire wear and alignment. The nose gear, an air-oil shock strut steerable up to 30° via rudder pedals, extends to support about 10% of the weight, with the mains handling the bulk through their aft positioning. Such configurations underscore the balance of simplicity and performance in light aircraft, though retractable variants offer aerodynamic gains at higher speeds.

Retractable systems

Retractable landing gear systems enable aircraft to stow the undercarriage during flight, significantly reducing aerodynamic drag and improving overall performance. The concept emerged in the early 20th century, with the first practical implementation appearing on Glenn Curtiss's Triad seaplane in 1911, where the gear retracted into the hull to minimize water resistance during takeoff and landing. This innovation addressed the drag penalties of fixed gear, which could reduce airspeed by up to 20% on early designs. Although initial adoption was limited to experimental and military aircraft in the interwar period—driven by speed requirements in racing and fighter planes—retractable systems became widespread after World War II, particularly in commercial aviation, as engine power and airframe designs advanced to justify the added complexity for cruise efficiency gains. Retraction methods vary by aircraft configuration to optimize space and aerodynamics, with the most common approach for main landing gear involving inward folding into wing or fuselage bays, allowing the struts to pivot via trunnions mounted on the rear wing spar or fuselage structure. Sideways retraction is used in some designs, such as certain fighters, where gear legs swing laterally into underwing pods to accommodate narrow fuselages, while rearward methods stow the gear aft along the fuselage for streamlined integration. Nose gear typically retracts forward into the fuselage to maintain propeller clearance and balance, though upward retraction into the nose cone occurs in high-performance jets. These methods ensure the gear fits within the airframe's limited volume without compromising structural integrity, often requiring articulated linkages to achieve a compact stowed position. Actuation of retractable gear relies primarily on hydraulic systems for their high power density and reliability, using pressurized fluid—typically at 3,000 psi from engine-driven or electrically powered pumps—to drive actuators that extend or retract the gear in 5 to 10 seconds. Electric systems, common in light general aviation aircraft, employ motors to operate hydraulic pumps or directly actuate screw jacks, offering simpler integration but lower force output compared to pure hydraulics. Pneumatic actuation, using compressed air from engine bleed systems, is rarer for gear due to compressibility issues but appears in some older or specialized designs for emergency extension. Selector valves direct fluid flow to retraction or extension ports, with locks ensuring secure positioning; hydraulic dominance stems from its ability to handle loads up to several tons per leg under varying flight conditions. To maintain aerodynamic efficiency, gear bays are enclosed by doors and fairings that seal during flight, preventing airflow disruption that could increase drag by 5-10% if left open. Doors typically open outward or downward for extension, then close flush with the airframe surface using secondary actuators, often synchronized with gear position sensors to avoid partial exposure. Fairings—streamlined covers over exposed struts or wheels—further smooth airflow, with designs like bulbous pods on wing-mounted gear reducing turbulence; in advanced configurations, composite materials enable lighter, radar-absorbent fairings that integrate seamlessly. These features are critical, as incomplete sealing can negate much of the drag reduction from retraction itself. The primary trade-off of retractable systems is added weight, typically 20-50 kg more than fixed gear due to actuators, linkages, and reinforcements, which can reduce payload by 2-5% on smaller aircraft. However, this penalty is offset by cruise speed increases of 10-15%, as drag elimination allows higher true airspeeds without proportional fuel burn rises; for instance, studies on light twins show net range improvements of 5-8% on long legs. Maintenance complexity also rises, with hydraulic leaks or electrical faults contributing to 15% of gear-related incidents. Representative examples illustrate these principles in practice. The Boeing 737's main landing gear retracts inward and forward into fuselage bays via Hydraulic System A at 3,000 psi, with doors closing automatically to achieve near-flush aerodynamics, contributing to its efficient cruise at Mach 0.78. In contrast, the Piper PA-28R Arrow employs an electric motor-driven hydraulic pump for gear actuation, but system failures—often from electrical anomalies like alternator loss—have led to incidents where gear remained extended, highlighting vulnerabilities in lighter designs.

Shock absorption

Shock absorption in aircraft landing gear is essential for dissipating the vertical impact energy during touchdown, protecting the airframe from excessive loads and ensuring passenger comfort. The primary mechanism involves converting the aircraft's kinetic energy into heat and elastic deformation through specialized struts. This process is governed by the kinetic energy formula E=12mv2E = \frac{1}{2} m v^2, where mm is the aircraft mass and vv is the vertical sink velocity at touchdown, typically ranging from 3 to 6 m/s for design purposes in commercial aircraft. The most common type of shock absorber in modern aircraft is the oleo-pneumatic strut, which combines hydraulic oil for viscous damping with compressed nitrogen gas for elastic energy storage. Upon impact, the strut compresses, forcing oil through orifices to generate damping forces while the nitrogen compresses to absorb energy, preventing rapid rebound. For lighter general aviation aircraft, simpler systems like rubber in compression—where stacked rubber discs deform to absorb shocks—or leaf springs, consisting of layered steel strips that flex under load, are often used due to their simplicity and lower weight. Key components of oleo-pneumatic struts include a piston-cylinder assembly, where the piston slides within the cylinder filled with oil and separated by a floating piston from the nitrogen chamber. Metering pins or orifices in the piston provide progressive damping, restricting oil flow more as compression increases to control deceleration rates. Stroke lengths, the maximum compression distance, typically range from 12 to 18 inches (305 to 457 mm) in commercial jet main gear struts to allow sufficient energy dissipation without bottoming out. Strut sizing is determined by factors such as aircraft mass, expected sink rate, and propeller or engine clearance requirements to avoid ground strikes. The static load per strut is calculated as F=mgnF = \frac{mg}{n}, where mm is the aircraft mass, gg is gravitational acceleration, and nn is the number of main struts, ensuring the design can handle dynamic loads up to 2-3 times static weight during landing. Maintenance of shock struts involves periodic nitrogen recharge to maintain pressures typically between 200 and 400 psi, depending on aircraft type and strut size, along with inspections for oil leaks, corrosion, or metering pin wear to preserve damping efficiency. For instance, the Airbus A320's main landing gear oleo strut features a 342 mm stroke, optimized for its 66-tonne maximum landing weight (MLW) and typical design sink rate.

Tires and wheels

Aircraft landing gear tires are engineered to withstand extreme loads, high speeds, and varying runway conditions, primarily using bias-ply or radial constructions. Bias-ply tires feature plies oriented at angles to the tread centerline, providing robust sidewall support for heavy loads and high-speed operations, while radial tires employ cords running perpendicular to the tread for enhanced flexibility, fuel efficiency, and heat dissipation. Both types typically incorporate nylon cords for strength and elasticity, with some advanced designs, such as Michelin's Air X series, integrating Kevlar (aramid) reinforcements to improve cut resistance and durability against foreign object damage. Tread patterns are optimized for traction on dry runways and hydroplaning prevention on wet surfaces, featuring circumferential grooves to channel water and sipes for grip during braking and cornering. Wheels supporting these tires are predominantly forged from aluminum alloys for their high strength-to-weight ratio, though magnesium alloys are used in some applications for further weight reduction despite higher corrosion risks. Designs often include multi-piece assemblies with beads to secure the tire under high loads, ensuring structural integrity during impacts. Wheel diameters vary significantly by aircraft size, ranging from approximately 5 inches for light general aviation planes to 49 inches for heavy commercial jets like the Boeing 747. Tire loading is calculated based on aircraft weight distribution and gear configuration, with static load per tire determined as the maximum ramp weight multiplied by a load factor (typically 1.0 to 1.1) divided by the number of wheels; for example, main gear positions often bear 80-90% of the total weight across multiple tires. During landing, dynamic overloads can reach up to 1.5 times the static load due to vertical descent rates and impact forces, necessitating tires rated for these transient peaks to prevent failure. Inflation pressure, ranging from 30 psi for small aircraft tires to 200 psi for those on heavy transports, is selected to optimize contact patch size and load distribution, following the approximate formula P=LA×kP = \frac{L}{A \times k}, where PP is pressure, LL is the load per tire, AA is the contact area, and kk is an empirical constant accounting for tire deflection (often around 0.8-1.0 for aircraft applications). This ensures the tire deflects 20-32% under rated load for balanced performance and pavement stress. Tires integrate with braking systems via anti-skid mechanisms that modulate pressure to prevent wheel lockup, enhancing directional control through differential braking on main gears. Carbon composite brakes, common on large aircraft, absorb high kinetic energies—up to 28 MJ per landing in overload scenarios—through frictional heat dissipation, far exceeding steel brakes' capacity and enabling shorter stopping distances. A representative example is the Michelin Air X radial tire fitted to the Airbus A380's main landing gear, featuring Kevlar-reinforced sidewalls for superior damage resistance, a load rating of 34 metric tons per tire at 17.2 bar (approximately 250 psi), and a speed rating of 225 mph to accommodate taxi and rejected takeoff conditions.

Steering and control

Steering and control of aircraft on the ground are primarily managed through the landing gear, enabling precise directional changes during taxiing, takeoff, and landing rollouts. In tricycle gear configurations, the nose gear serves as the main steering component, typically controlled via hydraulic actuators connected to pilot inputs. These systems allow for both limited steering through rudder pedals and enhanced control via a dedicated tiller for larger aircraft. For large commercial jets, such as the Boeing 777, a hand-operated tiller on the captain's side provides fine control of the nose gear, achieving steering angles up to 70 degrees in either direction, which overrides the more limited rudder pedal input of about 7 degrees. Similarly, the Boeing 737 uses a tiller for maximum nose wheel deflection of 78 degrees, while rudder pedals limit it to 7 degrees for alignment during takeoff and landing. To mitigate unwanted oscillations, known as shimmy, which can occur at speeds above 20 knots due to tire imbalance or uneven surfaces, shimmy dampers are integrated into the nose gear; these devices use hydraulic fluid resistance or elastomeric friction to stabilize the wheel and prevent rapid side-to-side vibrations that could lead to structural fatigue or loss of control. The main landing gears are often free-castoring to reduce complexity and weight, relying on differential braking for supplementary steering, particularly in smaller aircraft or during tight maneuvers. Differential braking involves applying uneven pressure to the left and right brake pedals, which independently activate the main gear brakes to yaw the aircraft; this method is essential for taildragger configurations, where rudder pedals mechanically link to the steerable tail wheel for direct control. In direct steering setups, hydraulic systems link rudder pedals to the nose gear for low-angle turns (up to 10-15 degrees), while the tiller handles sharper maneuvers, with main gears remaining castered to follow the nose. Turning radius is constrained by the nose gear steering limit, main gear track (the lateral distance between left and right main gear struts, typically 4-6 meters in narrow-body jets), and tire friction. For narrow-body aircraft like the Boeing 737, the minimum inner main gear turning radius is approximately 10-11 meters at full steering deflection, enabling efficient taxiway navigation without excessive scrubbing. Military examples, such as the F-16, employ a tiller or button-activated nose wheel steering up to 45 degrees for tight turns, supplemented by differential braking for enhanced ground handling. Modern systems incorporate automation for improved safety and precision, including nose-wheel steering computers that process pilot inputs electronically before hydraulic actuation, as seen in the Bombardier CRJ200's steer-by-wire setup with dual actuators. Autobrake systems, integrated with steering controls, automatically apply modulated braking post-touchdown to maintain a selected deceleration rate, coordinating with nose gear inputs to minimize runway excursion risks during high-speed turns.

Specialized types

Skid landing gear consists of two parallel longitudinal tubes attached to the fuselage via cross tubes, providing ground contact for helicopters and certain bush planes without wheels. These skids are typically constructed from aluminum tubing for durability and lightweight properties, though composite materials like carbon fiber reinforced polymers have been investigated for weight reduction and improved impact resistance in modern designs. Wear pads, often made of replaceable high-friction materials such as steel or polymer, are affixed to the bottom of the skids to minimize abrasion during ground operations and facilitate sliding on uneven terrain. For example, the Bell 47 helicopter employs skid gear that offers approximately 20 cm of ground clearance, enabling operations in confined or rough environments typical for light utility roles. Ski landing gear replaces wheels with elongated runners designed for snow and soft surfaces, enhancing flotation and traction in winter operations for fixed-wing aircraft. These skis can be fixed, remaining in place year-round, or retractable, allowing conversion to wheeled configurations for varied missions; retractable models often use hydraulic or mechanical systems to raise the skis above the wheels during flight. A keel, or reinforced runner along the underside, provides directional stability by resisting lateral sliding on ice or packed snow, similar to a boat's keel in water. Manufacturers like Aero Ski produce both types for bush planes, with load capacities up to 2,500 pounds for retractable units, ensuring compatibility with light aircraft such as the Cessna 180. The tandem landing gear configuration features two main gear assemblies positioned fore and aft along the aircraft's centerline, eliminating the need for a separate nose gear while maintaining balance around the center of gravity (CG). This layout distributes weight evenly between the forward and aft wheels, providing stability during ground rolls without requiring the propeller clearance of a taildragger setup. It is particularly suited to gliders, where low drag and simplicity are prioritized; for instance, certain Schempp-Hirth models utilize this arrangement to support the CG range during unpowered flight and landings. Monowheel landing gear employs a single central wheel beneath the fuselage, supplemented by lightweight outrigger wheels at the wingtips to prevent tipping during ground handling. This design minimizes drag and weight in sailplanes, allowing for efficient soaring performance while the main wheel absorbs landing impacts through rubber shock mounting and hydraulic braking. The Schleicher ASW 27 exemplifies this setup with its retractable 5.00-5 monowheel, which includes a crumple zone in the struts for overload protection and integrates seamlessly with the aircraft's T-tail and water ballast system. Folding landing gear allows the struts and wheels to collapse inward or backward for compact storage, a feature common in military fighters to facilitate transport in hangars or aboard ships. In retractable systems, the gear legs articulate via hinges and actuators to fold into dedicated bays, reducing the aircraft's footprint when not in use. While the F-35 Lightning II primarily relies on standard retractable gear optimized for stealth and carrier operations, similar folding mechanisms appear in legacy fighters like the F-4 Phantom for maintenance and shipping efficiency. Other specialized variants include kneeling gear, which hydraulically lowers the fuselage to a ramp-like angle for easier loading of cargo or passengers, as seen in the Lockheed C-130 Hercules transport aircraft. This system adjusts the main gear struts to achieve a near-level cargo floor, accommodating pallets up to 20,000 pounds without ramps. Additionally, landing gear positions are engineered with variable CG shifts in mind, particularly in cargo aircraft where fuel burn or payload redistribution can alter balance; the gear placement ensures propeller clearance and stability across the operational CG envelope, typically 10-40% of the mean aerodynamic chord.

Environmental adaptations

Landing gear for seaplanes and amphibious aircraft incorporates floats or hulls to enable operations on water surfaces, providing buoyancy to support the aircraft's weight while displacing water. These systems replace traditional wheeled gear, with floats typically consisting of two main pontoons attached via struts and spreader bars to maintain stability. For amphibious configurations, retractable wheels are integrated into the floats, allowing transitions between water and land operations; the wheels must be extended for runway landings and retracted to prevent hydrodynamic drag or capsizing during water touchdowns. A representative example is the Cessna 208 Caravan equipped with amphibious floats, such as those from Wipaire, which increase the aircraft's gross weight capability to 8,750 pounds on water while incorporating retractable wheel gear for versatility in remote or coastal environments. Buoyancy in these systems is calculated based on the volume of water displaced, using water's density of approximately 62 pounds per cubic foot; federal regulations require floats to provide at least 80 percent excess buoyancy beyond the aircraft's maximum weight to account for partial flooding or wave action. This ensures the aircraft remains afloat even if one float is compromised, with total buoyancy typically equaling 1.8 times the aircraft's weight for safety margins during displacement-mode operations on calm water. Shipboard operations demand specialized landing gear adaptations for aircraft carriers, including arresting hooks mounted on the tail or fuselage to engage deck pendants that rapidly decelerate the aircraft from approach speeds up to 160 knots over short distances. Carrier-based aircraft also feature folding wings and, in some cases, collapsible gear struts to facilitate compact storage in hangar decks, reducing space requirements amid multiple aircraft. During catapult-assisted launches, the gear experiences significant longitudinal stresses, with accelerations averaging 3 g and peaking at 4 g on the nose gear to achieve takeoff speeds from zero to over 160 mph in about two seconds, necessitating reinforced struts and fittings to withstand these dynamic loads without structural failure. Short takeoff and landing (STOL) aircraft require reinforced landing gear struts to handle impacts on unprepared or rough terrain, such as gravel, grass, or uneven fields, where shock absorption must mitigate high sink rates and obstacles. These struts often use oleo-pneumatic designs with extended travel to absorb energy from hard landings, prioritizing durability over retractability for bush operations. The de Havilland Canada DHC-3 Otter exemplifies this with its fixed tricycle gear featuring robust magnesium wheels and struts optimized for rough-field performance, maintaining a low propeller clearance of approximately 10-12 inches to allow steep approach angles without ground strikes during STOL maneuvers. Crosswind capabilities are enhanced through gear designs like yawable (castering) nose wheels, which swivel freely up to 30-45 degrees to align with runway tracking during gusts, reducing side loads on the fuselage. Offset main gear placements, where wheels are laterally staggered relative to the aircraft centerline, further aid stability in winds of 20-30 knots by allowing differential touchdown and minimizing weathervaning tendencies. NASA investigations into such configurations demonstrated successful crosswind landings up to 30 knots with gear offsets, tracking crab angles closely without excessive heading deviations. For emergency scenarios like engine-out landings, temporary ground carriages or recovery dollies provide wheeled support under the fuselage, enabling safe ground handling when primary gear is unavailable or damaged. These dollies, often with capacities up to 16,000 pounds and hydraulic lowering mechanisms, attach via fuselage hard points to facilitate towing or repositioning post-belly landing, preventing further structural stress during recovery operations.

Operations and safety

Pre-flight inspections of aircraft landing gear are essential to ensure operational integrity before takeoff. These checks typically include visual examinations of the gear struts, tires, and linkages for damage or irregularities, as well as functional tests such as cycling the gear through extension and retraction—commonly known as a gear swing test—to verify hydraulic or electric systems respond correctly. For retractable gear, pilots confirm the down-and-locked position using indicator lights, where "three greens" signifies that the nose gear and both main gears are securely extended and locked. During flight, landing gear serves roles beyond touchdown, such as providing aerodynamic drag when extended to act as an improvised speed brake in non-emergency scenarios, helping to control descent rates or manage speed. In emergencies requiring rapid descent, pilots may perform a fuel jettison, or emergency dump, to reduce aircraft weight below the maximum landing limit, avoiding structural stress from an overweight touchdown while prioritizing safe landing over fuel conservation. Landing gear accidents, including gear-up landings and collapses, pose significant risks and often stem from human factors. Gear-up landings, where the gear remains retracted during touchdown, occur in approximately 12 to 24 incidents annually in general aviation, with pilot error—such as forgetting to extend the gear—accounting for the majority of cases, consistent with broader trends where pilot-related factors contribute to about 70% of aviation accidents. Gear collapses frequently result from overload during hard landings or improper weight distribution, as seen in numerous National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB) investigations where excessive descent rates led to structural failure of the gear components. These incidents highlight the need for rigorous pilot training and adherence to checklists to prevent belly landings that damage the fuselage and risk fire. When normal retraction or extension systems fail, emergency procedures allow for alternative deployment methods to ensure safe landing. Free-fall extension relies on gravity to lower the gear after releasing pressure in the hydraulic lines, effective at speeds below approximately 95 knots indicated airspeed. Backup hydraulic pumps or manual cranks provide additional options, enabling pilots to force the gear down in the cockpit without primary power, and these systems are designed for high reliability in critical situations. In rotorcraft, ground resonance represents a dangerous instability during ground operations, arising from the coupling of rotor blade lag frequencies with the natural frequencies of the landing gear and fuselage, which can amplify vibrations to destructive levels. Prevention involves damping mechanisms, such as friction snubbers on the rotor hub, which dissipate energy and stabilize the system by limiting excessive blade motion relative to the airframe. Stowaways attempting to hide in wheel wells during takeoff pose security and safety threats, potentially affecting gear operation through undetected presence. Detection relies on pre-flight walk-arounds by ground crew to spot irregularities, though challenges persist if individuals board after inspections; advanced measures like weight discrepancy monitoring for uneven loading or specialized imaging can aid identification in high-risk scenarios. The earliest aircraft landing gear designs relied on simple skids without wheels, as exemplified by the 1903 Wright Flyer, which used wooden runners to facilitate takeoffs and landings on soft surfaces. This configuration limited mobility and required smooth, prepared surfaces for operations. The introduction of wheels marked a significant advancement, with the 1909 Blériot XI featuring a basic wheeled undercarriage consisting of bicycle-style wheels and skids, enabling the first powered flight across the English Channel and improving ground handling on varied terrain. By the 1930s, aerodynamic considerations drove the development of retractable landing gear to reduce drag and enhance speed, pioneered in aircraft like the 1930 Boeing Monomail and the Lockheed Orion, which incorporated inward-folding mechanisms for cleaner airflow during flight. This innovation became standard in high-performance monoplanes, contributing to faster cruise speeds and better fuel efficiency in military and commercial aviation. Post-1980s, the adoption of composite materials in landing gear structures, such as carbon fiber-reinforced polymers, enabled weight reductions of up to 20-50% compared to traditional aluminum or steel, while maintaining structural integrity under high loads. In light aircraft and general aviation, fixed landing gear remains dominant, comprising approximately 63% of the active fleet due to its simplicity, lower maintenance costs, and suitability for short-field operations. However, trends toward electric retraction systems are emerging, particularly in modernized general aviation models, to provide smoother operation and reduced mechanical complexity without hydraulic dependencies. Experimental tracked landing gear, inspired by tank treads like those on the M4 Sherman, were tested in the 1940s for arctic and rough-field operations, aiming to distribute weight over soft snow or unprepared surfaces and eliminate the need for runways. These prototypes, such as those fitted to modified bombers for Alaskan basing schemes, proved cumbersome due to added mass and deployment challenges, remaining rare and largely abandoned by the 1950s. Modular designs promote commonality across aircraft families, as seen in the Boeing 787 variants (-8, -9, and -10), where shared landing gear components and footprints across models reduce manufacturing costs and simplify fleet maintenance. Looking ahead, smart landing gear integrated with sensors for real-time monitoring is gaining traction, enabling predictive maintenance through AI-driven analysis of wear, vibrations, and structural health to prevent failures and extend service life. Morphing gear concepts, capable of adapting configurations for variable loads or terrains, are under exploration to optimize performance in diverse environments. In urban air mobility, eVTOL designs like Joby Aviation's S4 feature retractable tricycle landing gear for compact vertical operations, supporting efficient vertiport integrations.

Spacecraft landing gear

Reentry and recovery systems

Reentry and recovery systems for spacecraft landing gear facilitate the safe return of vehicles from orbital velocities to Earth's surface, managing intense aerodynamic heating, deceleration forces, and touchdown impacts through integrated parachutes, aeroshells, and deployable structures. These systems are tailored for atmospheric entry, where vehicles experience hypersonic speeds exceeding 7 km/s, requiring robust designs to absorb peak loads while enabling precise recovery. Unlike conventional aircraft gear, spacecraft systems must withstand reentry plasma sheaths and variable descent profiles, often combining ballistic or lifting trajectories with deceleration aids to limit g-forces on payloads or crew. Parachute-assisted landings form a core component of many Earth-return missions, where a drogue parachute deploys at altitudes around 10 km to stabilize the vehicle and reduce speed from supersonic levels, followed by main parachutes at approximately 3 km to further decelerate to terminal velocities of 6-8 m/s. In such sequences, landing gear or legs extend shortly before touchdown to absorb residual vertical and horizontal velocities, with pyrotechnic or spring mechanisms ensuring rapid deployment under dynamic loads. For example, NASA's Orion crew module employs two 23-foot drogue parachutes for initial stabilization before three main parachutes slow the capsule to 17 mph at splashdown, integrating with an aeroshell that protects the underlying recovery interfaces. The Space Shuttle's reentry system utilized a winged orbiter with conventional tricycle landing gear, featuring hydraulic actuators for extension and triple-redundant hydraulic lines to ensure reliability during unpowered glide approaches at hypersonic entry followed by subsonic rollout. The main landing gears each incorporated multiple wheels and oleo-pneumatic shock struts to handle touchdown speeds up to 346 km/h horizontally with minimal vertical velocity, while the nose gear provided steering via differential braking; the program concluded with the final flight in 2011. Similarly, the Boeing X-37B orbital test vehicle employs conventional retractable landing gear for runway recoveries, enabling autonomous gliding reentries and horizontal touchdowns on prepared surfaces like those at Vandenberg Space Force Base, with gear deployment timed to aerodynamic conditions post-service module separation. Capsule-based systems, such as the Soyuz descent module, rely on land landings with four foldable legs deployed via pyrotechnic charges and springs at low altitudes to cushion impacts, designed to tolerate lateral velocities up to 1 m/s and vertical descent rates reduced to 2-3 m/s by soft-landing rockets firing just before touchdown. These legs, integrated with the heat shield, extend rapidly to distribute loads across crushable honeycomb structures, enabling recovery on unprepared terrain after parachute stabilization. Alternative recovery approaches include mid-air helicopter snatches, as pioneered in the Corona satellite program where C-119 aircraft used recovery poles to snag parachute-suspended film capsules descending from orbit, achieving over 100 successful mid-air retrieves between 1960 and 1972. For gliding reentries, early concepts incorporated skids as non-retractable landing legs to support horizontal touchdowns after controlled atmospheric skips, providing stability without wheels for rough-surface recoveries. Throughout these systems, landing gear must endure peak decelerations of 4-6 g during the aerodynamic braking phase, with designs incorporating energy-absorbing materials to manage vertical touchdown velocities up to 5.5 m/s in nominal ballistic profiles, ensuring structural integrity for crew safety and payload recovery.

Planetary landers

Planetary landers employ specialized landing gear to achieve safe touchdown on airless or thin-atmosphere bodies like the Moon and Mars, where surface gravity is a fraction of Earth's—approximately 1/6 g on the Moon and 1/3 g on Mars—necessitating adaptations in leg length and energy absorption to prevent toppling or structural failure. Crush zones in the legs, often made of deformable materials, dissipate impact energy primarily through the formula E=mghE = mgh, where EE is the energy absorbed, mm is the lander's mass, gg is the local gravitational acceleration, and hh represents the effective drop height during descent; this scaling ensures the gear handles lower velocities and reduced weights compared to Earth-based systems. Moon landers, such as the Apollo Lunar Module (LM), utilized four crushable aluminum honeycomb legs to absorb touchdown energies, with each primary strut designed for a 32-inch stroke and total energy dissipation of about 30,870 ft-lb per leg at vertical velocities up to 10 ft/s (approximately 3 m/s). These legs featured 5.6-foot lunar surface sensing probes on the forward and lateral footpads to detect contact within 1.5 feet of the surface, triggering engine shutdown to limit descent rate and ensure stability on slopes up to 12 degrees. The honeycomb material, bonded to aluminum face sheets on 37-inch diameter footpads, provided a static bearing strength of 1.0 lb/in² while maintaining the LM's 31-inch ground clearance post-deployment. For Mars, stationary landers like Viking 1 in 1976 incorporated three tripod legs with saucer-shaped footpads forming an equilateral triangle approximately 4 m across for enhanced stability on uneven regolith, each leg equipped with crushable honeycomb struts to handle vertical touchdown velocities of about 2.4 m/s after retrorocket deceleration from parachute descent. Mobile Mars rovers, including NASA's Perseverance, rely on a six-wheeled rocker-bogie suspension system that functions as independent articulated legs, absorbing impacts up to 2 m/s during lander egress and rough-terrain traversal while limiting body accelerations to 6 g's; the system's titanium box-beam rockers and bogies enable all wheels to maintain contact on obstacles up to 20 cm high, with Perseverance's 52.6 cm diameter aluminum wheels featuring curved titanium chevrons for added traction and durability. Touchdown confirmation in planetary landers typically involves Doppler radar for real-time velocity and altitude measurements during final descent, complemented by footpad pressure sensors that detect load upon surface contact to verify stability and initiate leg locking. For instance, Viking landers used radar altimeters to monitor descent rate, while modern systems like those on Perseverance integrate inertial measurement units with suspension telemetry for precise hazard avoidance. Beyond the Moon and Mars, the European Space Agency's Philae lander, which touched down on comet 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko in 2014, attempted to anchor using harpoon-tethered legs with ice screws in the footpads, but the harpoons failed to deploy due to a suspected ignition issue, causing the 100 kg craft to bounce and relocate unstably across the low-gravity surface (micro-g regime). Looking ahead, upcoming sample return missions, such as NASA's planned Mars Sample Return campaign, are incorporating reusable landing legs with enhanced crush zones and deployable structures to facilitate retrieval and ascent from planetary surfaces, drawing on heritage designs for repeated low-gravity operations.

Launch vehicle landing mechanisms

Launch vehicle landing mechanisms enable the recovery of reusable rocket stages through controlled vertical descents, primarily relying on propulsive systems to decelerate and structural elements for touchdown stability. These systems are essential for boosters like those in SpaceX's Falcon 9 and Starship, allowing repeated use to reduce launch costs. The process begins with atmospheric reentry, where aerodynamic control surfaces guide the stage toward a designated landing zone, followed by a powered burn to arrest descent velocity. Vertical landing is achieved using throttleable engines that provide precise thrust modulation during the final descent phase. For the Falcon 9 first stage, nine Merlin 1D engines, capable of throttling from approximately 40% to 100% of maximum thrust, perform the landing burn with variable throttling, enabling a stable hover and soft touchdown during the final approach to counter gravity. Grid fins, four hypersonic lattice structures made of titanium, deploy at the interstage to adjust the center of pressure and provide aerodynamic control during reentry and early descent, steering the booster with high precision up to Mach 2 speeds. In Starship's Super Heavy booster, iterations have refined this approach using up to 13 Raptor engines for the landing burn, with methane-oxygen staged-combustion cycles allowing deep throttling for controlled deceleration in successive test flights; in 2025, Starship completed additional test flights (Flights 10 and 11) with successful ocean soft landings, advancing toward tower catches. Landing legs provide the structural interface for touchdown, deploying to absorb impact and ensure stability. On the Falcon 9, four extensible legs constructed from carbon fiber with aluminum honeycomb cores are actuated by pneumatic cylinders powered by high-pressure helium, unfolding via pushers and latches without pyrotechnics for reusability. These legs extend outward, forming a stable base with splay angles of approximately 20-30 degrees to distribute loads and prevent tip-over on uneven surfaces like drone ship decks. Starship prototypes have tested similar deployable leg concepts, evolving from early prototypes with fixed struts to more robust designs integrated with Raptor engine firings for hover-slam maneuvers. During landing, the system experiences peak decelerations of 5-10 g, with legs designed to handle compressive forces exceeding 30 tons while maintaining upright stability. Guidance systems combine GPS and inertial navigation (INS) for pinpoint accuracy, achieving landings within 10 meters of the target, often below 1 meter on drone ships. The landing burn typically lasts 20-30 seconds, starting from altitudes around 1,000 meters to reduce velocity from hundreds of meters per second to near-zero. For ocean recoveries, autonomous drone ships—such as "Of Course I Still Love You" and "Just Read the Instructions"—serve as offshore platforms, equipped with deck padding to accommodate minor inaccuracies and facilitate booster uprighting post-landing. These vessels enable recoveries far from launch sites, supporting high-cadence operations. The first successful vertical landing of a Falcon 9 booster occurred on December 21, 2015, at Landing Zone 1 on Cape Canaveral, marking a milestone in reusable rocketry after prior barge attempts. This achievement paved the way for routine recoveries, with over 400 drone ship landings by 2025. Starship development has iterated on these principles, incorporating Raptor engines for more powerful burns in full-scale tests, including ocean soft landings in 2024 and 2025 flights, advancing toward tower catches and interplanetary applications.

Ground vehicles and other applications

Automotive and rail landing gear

In rail vehicles, the concept of landing gear is embodied in bogies, which are pivoting, articulated frames that house axles, wheels, and suspension systems to support the car's weight and ensure stability on tracks. These bogies typically feature primary suspension between the axle boxes and frame—often coil springs combined with hydraulic dampers providing vertical stiffness of 8–15 MN/m—and secondary suspension between the frame and car body, utilizing air springs or rubber-metal composites for enhanced ride comfort and load distribution. A representative example is the Y25 bogie, a standardized two-axle design for freight wagons on 1,435 mm gauge tracks, supporting axle loads up to 22.5 tons at speeds of 120 km/h, with an H-shaped frame, integrated brake rigging, and wheelbase of 1,800 mm. The Eurofima bogie standards, developed for interoperability in European passenger rail, influenced designs like the FIAT bogie, which uses nested coil springs for both suspension levels and a Y-shaped frame to accommodate varying axle loads in long-distance coaches. In automotive applications, landing gear equivalents are found in independent suspension systems, where upper and lower control arms serve as the structural "gear" to locate the wheels, while shock absorbers dampen oscillations and coil or leaf springs absorb vertical impacts from road surfaces. These components isolate the vehicle's body from vibrations, improving handling and passenger comfort; for instance, double-wishbone setups use the arms to control camber and caster angles during cornering. Wheel load distribution, critical for tire wear and stability, is determined by the lateral load transfer formula ΔF=mayht\Delta F = \frac{m \cdot a_y \cdot h}{t}, where mm is the sprung mass, aya_y is lateral acceleration, hh is the center of gravity height, and tt is the track width, allowing engineers to predict shifts in vertical forces on each wheel under dynamic conditions. For trucks and trailers, landing gear refers to the retractable support legs that stabilize the trailer when detached, while fifth-wheel couplings provide the pivotal connection to the tractor unit, enabling articulation for maneuvering. These are often paired with air suspension systems that maintain load leveling by adjusting air pressure in bellows—typically ranging from 50 to 100 psi—to compensate for varying payloads and prevent sagging. These systems enhance axle load distribution and ride quality, with capacities typically ranging from 20,000 to 40,000 pounds per axle in heavy-duty setups. In high-speed rail, advanced landing gear incorporates active tilting mechanisms, where hydraulic or electromechanical actuators lean the car body into curves to counteract centrifugal forces at speeds exceeding 300 km/h, and gearless drives using asynchronous traction motors directly coupled to axles for reduced maintenance and higher efficiency. Contemporary examples illustrate these principles, such as the Tesla Cybertruck's adaptive air suspension, which automatically adjusts ride height via sensors and compressors to optimize aerodynamics, off-road clearance, or towing stability across modes like "Chill" or "Extract." Safety in rail landing gear is bolstered by wheel flanges, typically 2.5–3 cm (1–1.2 inches) in height, which guide wheels along the railhead and prevent derailment by resisting lateral displacement during flange climb scenarios.

Military and experimental uses

In military aircraft, landing gear designs prioritize durability, rapid deployment, and integration with stealth features to support combat operations. Combat aircraft often incorporate targeted ballistic protection on landing gear components to shield against small arms fire and shrapnel, focusing on critical areas like struts and doors without compromising weight or aerodynamics. For instance, the F-35 Lightning II features a landing gear system engineered for all-aspect stealth, with retraction mechanisms that minimize radar cross-section by aligning bays and doors flush with the airframe's low-observable contours. Similarly, the B-2 Spirit bomber employs a tricycle landing gear configuration with four main gear legs under the fuselage, each featuring two wheels, to distribute load while maintaining stealth integrity during ground operations, though the system has faced challenges like gear coupling failures leading to collapses. Vertical takeoff and landing (VTOL) aircraft in military service adapt landing gear for versatile operations, often including retractable pads or skid supports to enable hovering and rough-field landings. The AV-8B Harrier II, a key U.S. Marine Corps VTOL platform, uses conventional tricycle landing gear with reinforced struts for carrier and austere landings, but incorporates emergency skid provisions on the fuselage and outriggers for controlled belly or hover descents when gear fails, as demonstrated in incidents where pilots executed safe touchdowns without nose gear. These designs draw from earlier VTOL experiments, such as lift-fan systems paired with retractable pads to handle vertical loads without traditional wheels. Experimental military applications have pushed landing gear innovations for enhanced short takeoff and landing (STOL) capabilities, particularly through boundary layer control (BLC) systems that blow air over wing surfaces to delay stall and enable ultra-short runways. In the 1960s and 1970s, U.S. and Soviet programs tested BLC on fighters like the MiG-21 and MiG-23, using engine bleed air for high-lift flaps that reduced landing distances to under 300 meters on unprepared surfaces, improving tactical deployment in forward areas. NASA's Quiet Short-Haul Research Aircraft (QSRA) further advanced this in the 1970s with a BLC system on modified de Havilland Canada DHC-7 wings, achieving STOL landings at speeds below 60 knots while maintaining stability, influencing later military transports. For ground-effect vehicles like hovercraft, experimental Soviet designs from the 1960s explored hybrid tracked and air cushion undercarriages for amphibious assaults over rough terrain, though full production shifted to skirt-based systems. Unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs) in military roles frequently employ detachable or omitted landing gear to support disposable missions, reducing cost and complexity for one-way strikes or reconnaissance. Many expendable drones, like the Ukrainian PD-2, opt for belly landings on runways or parachutes, forgoing gear entirely to prioritize payload over recovery. For reusable platforms, designs like the Northrop Grumman X-47B carrier-based demonstrator include folding wings and retractable tricycle gear optimized for catapult launches and arrested recoveries, enabling autonomous carrier operations without pilot risk. Recent additions, such as Kratos' XQ-58 Valkyrie variant with integrated retractable gear, allow conventional takeoffs and landings to extend mission flexibility in attritable swarms. In ground vehicles, military tanks and armored personnel carriers (APCs) treat suspension systems as de facto landing gear for traversing extreme terrain, with torsion bar setups providing superior articulation over obstacles. The M60 tank, a U.S. mainstay from the 1960s, uses torsion bar suspension with six road wheels per side to achieve 46 cm ground clearance and speeds up to 48 km/h on roads and 19 km/h cross-country, enabling operations in deserts and mud. (Note: Wikipedia cited here as placeholder; primary source is U.S. Army technical manuals.) Combat engineer variants, like the M728 based on the M60 chassis, add hydraulically actuated dozer blades for clearing minefields or ditches, allowing the vehicle to "land" and stabilize on uneven surfaces during breaching tasks. Soviet-era T-72 tanks similarly rely on torsion bars for rough-terrain mobility, with add-on blades on IMR-2 engineer vehicles to prepare landing zones for air assaults. These systems emphasize tactical durability, often forgoing wheels in favor of tracks to handle dozer-induced impacts and enemy fire.

Integration with other systems

Landing gear systems interface extensively with avionics to ensure safe operation during ground and flight transitions. Weight-on-wheels (WoW) sensors, typically mechanical switches or proximity detectors mounted on the landing gear struts, detect the aircraft's ground contact by sensing compressive loads exceeding a threshold, such as 200-500 pounds depending on the design. These sensors integrate with the avionics suite to disable thrust reversers in flight, preventing hazardous in-air deployment by interrupting the control circuitry until weight is confirmed on the gear. Similarly, squat switches—a subset of WoW sensors located on main gear shock struts—activate upon strut compression during touchdown, signaling the avionics to engage auto-brake systems at preselected deceleration rates, thereby reducing pilot workload and stopping distance. This integration relies on redundant sensor configurations to mitigate failures, with avionics computers cross-checking signals for reliability. Structurally, landing gear bays represent key integration points with the fuselage, acting as primary load-bearing interfaces where ground reaction forces are transferred to the airframe. Gear bays, often located in the lower fuselage or wing-fuselage fairings, serve as stress concentration areas during landing impacts, requiring reinforced bulkheads and keel beams to distribute compressive, shear, and torsional loads without compromising cabin integrity. Finite element analysis (FEA) is routinely applied in design to simulate these load paths, modeling the gear-fuselage attachment as a network of struts, pivots, and skins under dynamic conditions like three-point landings or turns, with stresses resolved via equilibrium equations and coordinate transformations to optimize material distribution and weight. For instance, FEA helps predict fuselage skin shear and bulkhead bending moments, ensuring the structure withstands ultimate loads up to 1.5 times limit values per FAA regulations. Propulsion system ties influence landing gear configuration, particularly through engine pylon alignments that dictate gear track—the lateral distance between main gear wheels—for aerodynamic and stability reasons. Pylon positioning under the wings or fuselage requires gear track adjustments to maintain propeller or jet efflux clearance, with inboard engine placements potentially narrowing the track to avoid interference during retraction, as analyzed in conceptual design tools. In propeller-driven aircraft, prop strike prevention integrates gear design with propulsion by elevating the thrust line and adopting tricycle configurations with nose-high ground attitudes, providing at least 9-12 inches of propeller tip clearance to the runway under static load. This synergy ensures that gear strut lengths and angles align with engine mounting to minimize risks during bounces or uneven terrain encounters. In cross-domain applications, such as electric vertical takeoff and landing (eVTOL) vehicles, hybrid landing gear systems link to battery management for optimized performance under varying loads. Skid or retractable gear in eVTOLs incorporates load sensors that feed data to the battery management system (BMS), adjusting power distribution during vertical operations to account for gear-induced weight shifts and prevent overload on distributed propulsion units. For rail systems like maglev trains, the levitation interface—analogous to landing gear—integrates with signaling and control systems via electromagnetic suspension (EMS) actuators that maintain air gaps through feedback loops, interfacing with onboard computers for real-time adjustments to propulsion and guidance forces. Maintenance integration features built-in test equipment (BITE) embedded within landing gear components for continuous health monitoring. BITE modules, often housed in brake control units or hydraulic actuators, perform self-diagnostics during pre-flight checks, logging faults like sensor discrepancies or pressure anomalies to avionics displays for predictive maintenance. This avionics-linked capability reduces downtime by enabling ground crews to isolate issues without disassembly, as seen in systems compliant with ARINC 629 standards for data bus communication. A notable example is the Boeing 787 Dreamliner's fly-by-wire landing gear control, where electronic interfaces replace mechanical linkages, allowing the flight control computers to sequence extension, retraction, and braking via digital commands over ARINC 664 networks. In maglev applications, such as the Transrapid system, levitation controls interface with centralized signaling for automated gap regulation, ensuring seamless integration with propulsion during high-speed operations.

References

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