Gimli's inactive runway had been "carved up" into a
> variety of racing courses, including the aforementioned dragstrip.
> Drag races were perhaps the only auto racing event not taking place on
> July 23rd, 1983 since this was "Family Day" for the Winnipeg Sports Car
> Club. Go-cart races were being held on one portion of runway 32L, and
> just past the dragstrip another portion of the runway served as the
> final straightaway for a road course. Around the edges of the
> straightaway were cars, campers, kids, and families in abundance. To
> land an airplane in the midst of all of this activity meant certain
> disaster.
>
> Pearson and Copilot Quintal turned toward Gimli and continued their
> steep glide. Flight 143 disappeared below Winnipeg's radar screens,
> the controllers frantically radioing for information about the number
> of "souls" on board. Approaching Gimli Pearson and Quintal made their
> next unpleasant discovery: The RAT didn't supply hydraulic pressure to
> the 767's landing gear. Pearson ordered a "gravity drop" as Pearson
> thumbed frantically through the Quick Reference Handbook, or QRH.
> Quintal soon tossed the QRH aside and hit the button to release the
> gear door pins. They heard the main gear fall and lock in place. But
> Quintal only got two green lights, not three. The nose gear hadn't
> gone over center and locked, despite the "assist" it was given by the
> wind.
>
> Six miles out Pearson began his final approach onto what was formerly
> RCAFB Gimli. Pearson says his attention was totally concentrated on
> the airspeed indicator from this point on. Approaching runway 32L he
> realized he was too high and too fast, and slowed to 180 knots.
> Lacking dive brakes, he did what any sailplane pilot would do: He
> crossed the controls and threw the 767 into a vicious sideslip. Slips
> are normally avoided on commercial flights because of the the
> tremendous buffeting it creates, unnerving passengers. As he put the
> plane into a slip some of Flight 143's passengers ended up looking at
> nothing but blue sky, the others straight down at a golf course. Says
> Quintal, "It was an odd feeling. The left wing was down, so I was up
> compared to Bob. I sort of looked down at him, not sideways anymore."
> The only problem was that the slip further slowed the RAT, costing
> Pearson precious hydraulic pressure. Would he be able to wrestle the
> 767's dipped wing up before the plane struck the ground? Trees and
> golfers were visible out the starboard side passengers' windows as the
> 767 hurtled toward the threshold at 180 knots, 30-50 knots faster than
> normal. The RAT didn't supply "juice" to the 767's flaps or slats so
> the landing was going to be hot. Pearson didn't recover from the slip
> until the very last moment. A passenger reportedly said "Christ, I can
> almost see what clubs they are using." Copilot Quintal suspected
> Pearson hadn't seen the guardrail and the multitude of people and cars
> down the runway. But at this point it was too late to say anything. A
> glider only gets one chance at a landing, and they were committed.
> Quintal bit his lip and remained silent. Why did Pearson select 32L
> instead of 32R? Gimli was uncontrolled so Pearson had to rely on
> visual cues. It was approaching dusk. Runway 32L was a bit wider,
> having been the primary runway at Gimli in prior years. Light
> stanchions still led up to 32L. And the "X" painted on 32L, indicating
> its inactive status, was reportedly quite faded or non-existent.
> Having made an initial decision to go for 32L the wide separation of
> the runways would have made it impossible for Pearson to divert to 32R
> at the last moment. Pearson says he "Never even saw 32R, focusing
> instead on airspeed, attitude, and his plane's relationship to the
> threshold of 32L."
>
> The 767 silently leveled off and the main gear touched down as
> spectators, racers, and kids on bicycles fled the runway. The giant
> Boeing was about to become a 132 ton, silver bulldozer. One member of
> the Winnipeg Sports Car Club reported he was walking down the
> dragstrip, five gallon can full of hi-octane racing fuel in hand, when
> he looked up and saw the 767 headed right for him. Pearson stood on
> the brakes the instant the main gear touched down. An explosion rocked
> the 767's cabin as two tires blew. The nose gear, which hadn't
> locked down, collapsed with a bang. The nose of the 767 slammed
> against the runway, bounced, then began throwing a three hundred foot
> shower of sparks. The right engine nacelle struck the ground. The
> 767 reached the tail end of the dragstrip and the nose grazed a few of
> the guardrail's wooden support poles. (The dragstrip began in the
> middle of the runway with the guardrail extending towards 32L's
> threshold) Pearson applied extra right brake so the main gear would
> straddle the guardrail. Would the sports car fans be able to get out
> of the way, or would Pearson have to veer the big jet off the runway to
> avoid hitting stragglers?
>
> The 767 came to a stop on its nose, mains, and right engine nacelle
> less than a hundred feet from spectators, barbecues and campers. All
> of the race fans had managed to flee the path of the silver bulldozer.
> The 767's fuselage was intact. For an instant, there was silence in
> the cabin. Then cheers and applause broke out. They'd made it;
> everyone was alive. But it wasn't over yet. A small fire had broken
> out in the nose of the aircraft. Oily black smoke began to pour into
> the cockpit. The fiery deaths of passengers in an Air Canada DC-9 that
> had made an emergency landing in Cincinnati a month before was on the
> flight attendants' minds, and an emergency evacuation was ordered. The
> unusual nose-down angle at which the plane was resting made the rear
> emergency slides nearly vertical. Descending them was treacherous.
> The only injuries that resulted from Pearson's dead-stick landing of
> Flight 143 came from passengers exiting the rear emergency slide and
> slamming onto the asphalt. None of the injuries were life-threatening.
> The fire in the aircraft's nose area was battled by members of the
> Winnipeg Sports Car Club who converged on the plane with dozens of
> hand-held fire extinguishers. Pearson had touched down 800 feet from
> the threshold and used a mere 3,000 feet of runway to stop. A general
> aviation pilot who viewed the landing from a Cessna on the apron of
> 32R described it as "Impeccable." The 767 was relatively undamaged.
>
> Air Canada Aircraft #604 was repaired sufficiently to be flown out of
> Gimli two days later. After approximately $1M in repairs, consisting
> primarily of nose gear replacement, skin repairs, and replacement of a
> wiring harness, it re-entered the Air Canada fleet. To this day
> Aircraft #604 is known to insiders as "The Gimli Glider." The
> avoidance of disaster was credited to Capt. Pearson's "Knowledge of
> gliding which he applied in an emergency situation to the landing of
> one of the most sophisticated aircraft ever built." Captain Pearson
> strongly credits Quintal for his cockpit management of "Everything but
> the actual flight controls," including his recommendation of Gimli as a
> landing spot. Captains Pearson and Quintal spoke at the 1991 SSA
> Convention in Albuquerque about their experiences. Pearson was, at the
> time, still employed and flying for Air Canada, and occasionally flying
> his Blanik L-13 sailplane on the weekends; he has since retired to
> raise horses. Maurice Quintal is now an A-320 Pilot for Air Canada,
> and will soon be captaining 767's, including Aircraft #604.
>
> Copyright 1997 WHN
>
> A side-note to the Gimli story: After Flight 143 had landed safely, a
> group of Air Canada mechanics was dispatched to drive down and begin
> effecting repairs. They piled into a van with all their tools. They
> reportedly ran out of fuel en-route, finding themselves stranded
> somewhere in the back woods
and a link with a news story
Gimli Glider News Story Could you imagine being a passenger on that plane?
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