@@Sterlingjob there is doing your job and being good/skilled at doing your job. And, yes I appreciate when somebody has this extra. That doesn't mean, that I don't consider the engine power relevant. But only the engines wouldn't have saved it.
Just shows how the wind can suddenly bite even when it looks like the aircraft is making a smooth landing. Amazing that they were able to literally power out of it and get flying again.
It is a pretty standard procedure to perform a go around and it is trained regularly. But still looks amazing and scary. Glad I was not onboard as a passenger 🙂
@@pearljam_1 It very much IS STANDARD, in heavy winds and if the crew is not happy, a Go-Around is one of the things that must not be had second thoughts about, but simply DONE!
@@sts1243 I’m saying nobody practices in heavy wind like that. Just like a fighter pilot is trained to hit the eject button - nobody actually does it to practice. Two totally different experiences.
WOW! That was nerve wracking to watch, especially seeing them struggle to execute the go around. Never seen a plane suddenly swing sideways like that with both wheels on the ground.
@@virginiamudimu7333 Thankfully, no, this plane won't crash like that Chinese Airlines 747. That crashed (more than 20 years after the tailstrike that caused its damage) because the section that was damaged was badly repaired. British Airways, and the safety inspectors, won't allow that to happen.
I was in a BA plane from ABZ years ago, and it was similar to this. To be honest, the cross winds at ABZ should mean that the pilots are used to this. My flight landed 1st go, but I've never seen the tarmac on both sides so closely, and I hope it's the last.
Wow, that was a close call but the pilot(s) pulled it off and prevented it being a disaster. Congratulations to them. I can imagine the passengers starting to clap when it landed but then whoops. I hope nobody was toppled over in the cabin or had any overhead contents dumped on them. A bit of wild ride there but rescued form worse. Phew.
Blancoliro channel had a link to this video. I am now subscribing here! You are creating important content for the aviation community. Thanks for that.
Makes me laugh how some people post comments here criticising rudely other REAL pilots views of the incident from years of experience. Great capture btw Big Jet TV!
Wow what a catch that was Jerry. Props to the Pilot for the save and getting her back up safely for the go around. Massive skill to save that left handed lurch right at the last. This is why Windy arrivals are my Favorite, Getting to witness the skill of the Pilot.
Marvelous to see and very interesting to read the real pilots' thoughts on the causes of the incident and the human and technological responses to the crisis ! If I ever fly again it will be with more knowledge of why my palms are sweating !
Damn would definitely not want to have been a passenger on that plane. Crazy landing. Well done to the pilot for getting it back up in the air great skills. Well done to Jerry/Gilly for capturing that footage
Juan Browne made a video and referenced this video. He is the reason why I watch this channel. I had already put in my like 👍 before he mentioned it. Both of you guys are my truth in Aviation sources. Really glad to follow both of you. Happy subscriber 😊!
I'd say doing their jobs rather than heroes. Heroes go above and beyond. These were pilots landing the plane that they were also in. Kudos for not hurting people though.
@@microacg exactly. The word "hero" is used far too frequently in these situations. Yes, the pilots made decisions that saved lives. But that's their training and their jobs. A hero puts themselves in harms way, when they didnt have to, to save somebody else.
Oh my, I take my hat off to the pilot, he or she has amazing skill. Thank you Jerry / Gilly for the great bonus show today, I throughly enjoyed every minute.
@@ScreaminEmu Well I'm fairly sure that it wasn't pilot induced. I mean, it had a nice stable approach, with a nice decrab maneuver, perhaps a little bit of a float?, but made a touchdown right on the 1000ft markers. Obviously an initial touchdown with just one wheel, causing the plane to bounce, the Pilot Flying does a nice job of stabilising the aircraft for the next (hard) touchdown. The Pilots have by then initiated the Go Around maneuver, as you can see the spoilers starting to deploy, before being counteracted by the TOGA input. However, in the high stress environment caused by Go Arounds, there doesn't seem to be much right aileron input, and when a sudden gust hits the plane, the pilots are probably ill-prepared to deal with such an event, resulting in the near Pod strike. They recover the aircraft with a right aileron input, and are probably trying to get away quickly, probably causing the Pilot Flying to forget that it is the tailstrike prone a321 that they are flying (remember that pilots are rotated between different aircraft in the a320 family, as they share a common type rating, so they are probably used to the shorter a320, which BAW operate in far larger numbers than the a321)
Seen this clip on sky news which brought me to your channel. Thanks for the video, the skill of the Pilot is nothing but incredible to fly out of that!
I love your commentary. Top class coverage that will go global. One in a million photo/vid opportunity. As I'm an avid follower here you prob have gained more fans due to that chance in a few hundred landings buy u...keep flying those cameras high in the sky...
I see that no damage was recorded as the same aircraft went out to GVA this evening BA736 & is just on her way back as BA737. Dep to GVA was only 10mins late, so a visual check determined no damage I would imagine.
Thanks for the feedback Paul. Perhaps just a fine scrape, not enough to take it off the line. Definitely saw ‘dust’ as the tail lifted. Alloy skin too, so a little more ‘malleable’ than Carbon? 🤔
@@BigJetTVEXTRA I found the granular csv file (FR24) for BA1307 intersting reading. she was only doing 112 Knts while at 325Ft. But hit the deck at 124. It looks like it was a slow approach from 1000Ft. Worth a look Jerry.
I'd say an excellent job by the crew and an unfortunate situation leading to the tail strike. My guess as to what happened: 1: Stable approach over the threshold and right wing dipped to counteract being blown across the runway after decrabbing (standard) 2: Initial bounce on one wheel leads to a heavy touch down on both. Go around probably called at heavy touch down in anticipation of another bounce. Spoilers start to deploy but as soon as TOGA is selected, they auto retract. 3: A gust hits the aircraft at the worst moment, catching and lifting the now spoiler free wings. Although TOGA has been selected, the relatively long spool up time means there is a few second lag between idle at the flare and full commanded thrust. 4: The second the wing lifts, you can see an immediate right roll command, and with the thrust kicking in, and workload incredibly high and capacity low, it would be incredibly easy to prioritise getting away, and forgetting you're in the tailstrike prone A321, and not the 319/20 you'd been flying the day before. Just my two cents, but I'd say the worst part of this crews day was the rotten luck in having the event filmed 🤣
I agree, especially the aprt about the spoilers retracting, initially thought they were inputting a right roll there but the aileron isn't moving in that instance so it does look like the spoiler came up, then retracted. Interesting that they didn't come up after the first touchdown but I guess there wasn't enough weight on the wheel to trigger them
Just heard about your channel on Fox News this morning and can't tell you how thrilled I am. I'm a big jet girl! Finishing up your video from Heathrow yesterday. What an absolute blast! Thanks for all you are doing.
Love this channel. I was watching this morning from California (afternoon there) and it was awesome to watch the cross wind landings. That's not something we see too much out here with the boys streaming live at LAX. Great camera work and love the commentary. Keep up the awesome stream.
Most places already do. The cameras are not great at capturing night footage. Many crashes do not actually occur on the runway and crashes are also extremely rare.
The flight data recorder normally tells you a lot more useful information, not sure the video gives much of a clue as to what is going on in the cockpit.
@@classiced1416 But still, I bet you there are a lot of NTSB investigators and pilots who came here to see what happened with this one - going by the more than usual number of views.
Been waiting for this. That plane must have hit the runway if not very close. I wouldn’t want to be a passenger in the plane. I would have had a heart attack. Bloody hell
Fair point Rayan. The generally face the wing into the wind on touchdown, but after the bounce and the aircraft becoming airborne again, he seemed to get caught by a sudden side gust?
@@ryanhaart Fortunately we are all entitled to an opinion and after reviewing the footage frame by frame I am sticking with my original view, yes it may only be a bit of scratched paint because there was only a small pale smoke cloud but it touched.
I would have absolutely 💩💩 myself if I had been on that plane…..amazing skills from the pilot…….been waiting for this since Jerry went live! Xx thanks so such a great show as always xx
I could only imagine how the passangers had it. But again, it proves how well the planes are built now a days. Amazing, being so slow at the moment where made tail strike and still manage to regain the speed to make the go around. Great catch
What a ride for the pilots and passengers. Hope nobody was getting in a quick nap. That'll wake up dead,lol. Looked for a wing strike, but nope plenty of space between the ground and wing. As Jerry would say..."CAN YOU ADAM AND EVE IT?"
let's get a moment to appreciate the power of those engines
also the pilots for quick decision..
And the skills from the pilots
Triple jabbed engines!!!
@@annarend7056 You mean the drivers doing their jobs?
@@Sterlingjob there is doing your job and being good/skilled at doing your job. And, yes I appreciate when somebody has this extra. That doesn't mean, that I don't consider the engine power relevant. But only the engines wouldn't have saved it.
You’re a legend mate, absolute legend, the Murray Walker of aircraft landings and take offs
RIP.
A Leg-end
Just shows how the wind can suddenly bite even when it looks like the aircraft is making a smooth landing. Amazing that they were able to literally power out of it and get flying again.
Ground effects meets wind sheer...just when you think you got this, Mother Nature says ah no...
It is a pretty standard procedure to perform a go around and it is trained regularly. But still looks amazing and scary. Glad I was not onboard as a passenger 🙂
@@psindrup “standard” in heavy winds? I think not….
@@pearljam_1 It very much IS STANDARD, in heavy winds and if the crew is not happy, a Go-Around is one of the things that must not be had second thoughts about, but simply DONE!
@@sts1243 I’m saying nobody practices in heavy wind like that. Just like a fighter pilot is trained to hit the eject button - nobody actually does it to practice. Two totally different experiences.
WOW! That was nerve wracking to watch, especially seeing them struggle to execute the go around. Never seen a plane suddenly swing sideways like that with both wheels on the ground.
maybe it will crash what happened on china airlines flight 611 over taipei which crashed soon after takeoff on 25 may 2002 225 fatalities
Same here, it's like the lift suddenly increased on the right wing, or suddenly decreased on the the left wing. Very nerve-wracking indeed!
@@virginiamudimu7333 Thankfully, no, this plane won't crash like that Chinese Airlines 747. That crashed (more than 20 years after the tailstrike that caused its damage) because the section that was damaged was badly repaired. British Airways, and the safety inspectors, won't allow that to happen.
I was in a BA plane from ABZ years ago, and it was similar to this. To be honest, the cross winds at ABZ should mean that the pilots are used to this.
My flight landed 1st go, but I've never seen the tarmac on both sides so closely, and I hope it's the last.
Imagine being a passenger on that plane.
This clip just made the national news in the US - good capture Jerry!!!
Wow, that was a close call but the pilot(s) pulled it off and prevented it being a disaster. Congratulations to them. I can imagine the passengers starting to clap when it landed but then whoops. I hope nobody was toppled over in the cabin or had any overhead contents dumped on them. A bit of wild ride there but rescued form worse. Phew.
Wow that wind can be devastating. God bless these pilots, it certainly can't be easy!
Wow, that was crazy. Thanks for all the work you do to bring us these streams.
Blancoliro channel had a link to this video. I am now subscribing here!
You are creating important content for the aviation community. Thanks for that.
OH MY GOD. GILLY!!! 😆😆😆😆😆 that was a proper brown trouser moment, but we’ll done to the pilot 👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻
Yet again BIGJET TV is on point to bring us the best coverage of aviation 👍👍👌👏👏
Thank you and Well done Jerry and all the team
Wow, great spot J&G and what a recovery by the pilot. Amazing footage.
That was scary, glad the outcome was a good one👍 What a start to the show😮
This guys reaction makes it a million times better
Makes me laugh how some people post comments here criticising rudely other REAL pilots views of the incident from years of experience. Great capture btw Big Jet TV!
I don't know which was more exciting: the tail strike /side bounce / go around or the spine-tingling commentary!
I do actually rather enjoy Jerry's reactions 🤣
@@ScreaminEmu : Jerry is a superb commentator to be sure !
Wow what a catch that was Jerry. Props to the Pilot for the save and getting her back up safely for the go around. Massive skill to save that left handed lurch right at the last. This is why Windy arrivals are my Favorite, Getting to witness the skill of the Pilot.
Props to the pilot? That whole thing was pilot induced. Very avoidable.
@@Spyke-lz2hl And you know this how?
@@Spyke-lz2hl Thank you for your input, Have a nice day !
@@Spyke-lz2hl another one who doesn’t know what he’s blathering about.
We saw your video in France ! I recognized directly lol ! It was incredible !
Marvelous to see and very interesting to read the real pilots' thoughts on the causes of the incident and the human and technological responses to the crisis ! If I ever fly again it will be with more knowledge of why my palms are sweating !
Brilliant work Jerry. And you made it onto prime time national TV 📺
Wow!! Great footage Jerry. Tail strike as well!!😲😲
HOLY CHIT!!! WoW! Tail strike on the TOGA. Good thing u were rolling tape before it was live Jerry LoL! Wow!
Damn would definitely not want to have been a passenger on that plane. Crazy landing. Well done to the pilot for getting it back up in the air great skills. Well done to Jerry/Gilly for capturing that footage
Juan Browne made a video and referenced this video. He is the reason why I watch this channel. I had already put in my like 👍 before he mentioned it. Both of you guys are my truth in Aviation sources. Really glad to follow both of you. Happy subscriber 😊!
Great camera work. Thank goodness the pilot regained control.
Thanks Jerry for uploading that...I have been waiting for it.....wow No joking...crazy landing!
Such amazing skills! That pilot save many many lifes. A hero♥️
I'd say doing their jobs rather than heroes. Heroes go above and beyond. These were pilots landing the plane that they were also in. Kudos for not hurting people though.
@@microacg exactly. The word "hero" is used far too frequently in these situations. Yes, the pilots made decisions that saved lives. But that's their training and their jobs. A hero puts themselves in harms way, when they didnt have to, to save somebody else.
Loved the, "oh my flippin"
Made my day while having coffee.
Came over from flightawares story about you today!
OMG, that was more dramatic than Jerry explained. Jaw dropping!
Wow. Great capture Jerry!
oh my flipping God! that was a amazing catch!
That was UGLY!
Thanks for posting Jerry!
Note the spoilers....
What do you think caused it Juan?
@@TC.C excessive control inputs by the pilot in gusty conditions...can confuse the Airbus flight control logic and exacerbate the situation.
That’s Airbus for ya lol
Mr Browne follows this, nice!!!
Thank you Juan!
Massive respect to the pilot for keeping control and getting the Airbus back in the. Air 👌
0 respect for an utter GARBAGE landing attempt
@@ScreaminEmu you ever landed a passenger jet?
@@thatblueberryguy Thousands of times. You?
Ouch! Hard burn!
@@ScreaminEmu you must be a ball fun Mr Perfect.
And sky news have used it too, good work Jerry 👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻
Oh my, I take my hat off to the pilot, he or she has amazing skill. Thank you Jerry / Gilly for the great bonus show today, I throughly enjoyed every minute.
Yeah, no, getting into a situation where you almost bang a wing/engine and DO bang the tail is not demonstrating skill, sorry.
@@ScreaminEmu you try it then
@@archiederbyshire2402 I do it for a living, dude.
@@ScreaminEmu You're a liar.
@@ScreaminEmu Well I'm fairly sure that it wasn't pilot induced. I mean, it had a nice stable approach, with a nice decrab maneuver, perhaps a little bit of a float?, but made a touchdown right on the 1000ft markers. Obviously an initial touchdown with just one wheel, causing the plane to bounce, the Pilot Flying does a nice job of stabilising the aircraft for the next (hard) touchdown. The Pilots have by then initiated the Go Around maneuver, as you can see the spoilers starting to deploy, before being counteracted by the TOGA input.
However, in the high stress environment caused by Go Arounds, there doesn't seem to be much right aileron input, and when a sudden gust hits the plane, the pilots are probably ill-prepared to deal with such an event, resulting in the near Pod strike. They recover the aircraft with a right aileron input, and are probably trying to get away quickly, probably causing the Pilot Flying to forget that it is the tailstrike prone a321 that they are flying (remember that pilots are rotated between different aircraft in the a320 family, as they share a common type rating, so they are probably used to the shorter a320, which BAW operate in far larger numbers than the a321)
Well done BIG JET TV your all over the place with news cant beat Jerry and Gilly great footage.....
Awesome capture! May I feature this clip in one of my next uploads? Of course with a link to your original video.
Cheers!
Nope
Yes
Yes
Seen this clip on sky news which brought me to your channel. Thanks for the video, the skill of the Pilot is nothing but incredible to fly out of that!
Wow, that was just insane!
I love your commentary. Top class coverage that will go global. One in a million photo/vid opportunity. As I'm an avid follower here you prob have gained more fans due to that chance in a few hundred landings buy u...keep flying those cameras high in the sky...
british equivalent of "nicht so tief rüdiger": easy easy EASY! OMG GILLY
I love a well executed touch and go
I see that no damage was recorded as the same aircraft went out to GVA this evening BA736 & is just on her way back as BA737. Dep to GVA was only 10mins late, so a visual check determined no damage I would imagine.
Thanks for the feedback Paul. Perhaps just a fine scrape, not enough to take it off the line. Definitely saw ‘dust’ as the tail lifted. Alloy skin too, so a little more ‘malleable’ than Carbon? 🤔
Don't they have a pressure plate that engineering can check for impacts etc? Looked like a very light brush, they might have got away with it.
@@BigJetTVEXTRA I found the granular csv file (FR24) for BA1307 intersting reading. she was only doing 112 Knts while at 325Ft. But hit the deck at 124. It looks like it was a slow approach from 1000Ft. Worth a look Jerry.
Ha nothing was spotted!!!!
A quick touch up with a can of 'BA White' Humbrol paint and a small brush and she's good as new 😄
Good catch for you and the pilots, very little indication it would turn out like that from the final approach!
I'd say an excellent job by the crew and an unfortunate situation leading to the tail strike. My guess as to what happened:
1: Stable approach over the threshold and right wing dipped to counteract being blown across the runway after decrabbing (standard)
2: Initial bounce on one wheel leads to a heavy touch down on both. Go around probably called at heavy touch down in anticipation of another bounce. Spoilers start to deploy but as soon as TOGA is selected, they auto retract.
3: A gust hits the aircraft at the worst moment, catching and lifting the now spoiler free wings. Although TOGA has been selected, the relatively long spool up time means there is a few second lag between idle at the flare and full commanded thrust.
4: The second the wing lifts, you can see an immediate right roll command, and with the thrust kicking in, and workload incredibly high and capacity low, it would be incredibly easy to prioritise getting away, and forgetting you're in the tailstrike prone A321, and not the 319/20 you'd been flying the day before.
Just my two cents, but I'd say the worst part of this crews day was the rotten luck in having the event filmed 🤣
Dont it floated for quite long time? Probably wind change low near ground?
Hesitation kills this crew showed a lack of leadership.
@@airhab lol, leave this one to people who have actually operated heavy multi-engine aircraft.
I agree, especially the aprt about the spoilers retracting, initially thought they were inputting a right roll there but the aileron isn't moving in that instance so it does look like the spoiler came up, then retracted. Interesting that they didn't come up after the first touchdown but I guess there wasn't enough weight on the wheel to trigger them
Why would they have clean wings having just touched down. Very very unlikely.
Just heard about your channel on Fox News this morning and can't tell you how thrilled I am. I'm a big jet girl! Finishing up your video from Heathrow yesterday. What an absolute blast! Thanks for all you are doing.
Well up there with the best TOGA we have seen on the channel. Would not have enjoyed that if on board wow
Saw this video on the news and thought of watching the original, quite the landing!
Love this channel. I was watching this morning from California (afternoon there) and it was awesome to watch the cross wind landings. That's not something we see too much out here with the boys streaming live at LAX. Great camera work and love the commentary. Keep up the awesome stream.
gosh sweaty palms watching that one, good catch Jerry!
Parabéns pelp registro . Foi de tirar o fôlego. Ainda bem que deu tudo certo.
Amazing pilot!
Wow! That must have been a serious gust of wind at the last second! Nice job by the pilot to manage that.
Wow that’s was amazing. It’s just been aired on prime time news in Australia
Wow, just missed it on the live, but glad you guys caught the action here, full marks to the Pilot for the Go around, great show as always
Great catch... Pilot and cameraman! Also: YIKES!
Omg! That is some crazy footage. I would have not wanted to be on that flight! Wow!
That awesome tail end design👌
Jerry: yeah he’s got that
Pilot: let me take this dance
😄 yeh, it all looked good at 100ft!
Well done mate your footage made the news in Australian news tonight
It's definitely a brown trouser moment for the passengers. I'm glad the pilots skill saved the day
Holy moly. That is why Pilot Training is needed for this kind of situation.
Good job it was full of Aberdonians, used to getting battered by the wind, "Nae bother at all son"
😅👍
That tail strike is inSane. And i think Jerry's commentary is funny as heck. Great camera work also top notch.
My goodness! Big kudos to that pilot!
Thanks for uploading this, I was waiting for this like everyone else on the channel 🙂
He should’ve aborted after the first touchdown
WOW!!! great camera work to stay with it!
Given the cost of investigating airliner crashes, doesn't it make sense that all runways have security cameras constantly on loop?
Most places already do. The cameras are not great at capturing night footage. Many crashes do not actually occur on the runway and crashes are also extremely rare.
@@Make_Boxing_Great_Again you don't need a crash, but it would help to investigate instances like this or even less dangerous ones
The flight data recorder normally tells you a lot more useful information, not sure the video gives much of a clue as to what is going on in the cockpit.
@@classiced1416 But still, I bet you there are a lot of NTSB investigators and pilots who came here to see what happened with this one - going by the more than usual number of views.
Even with all the footage in the world there would still need to be a full investigation
Omg was on edge of seat scary. Ty for posting it.
Been waiting for this all day since Jerry went live. BRILLIANT
0:24 "Yeah, he's got that" Reminds me of Murray Walker, thanks @BIG JET TV 👍 😀😀🤣🤣😂😂
Your footage on Sky News 🙂- great capture
Superb capture and commentary 👏🏽
Been waiting for this. That plane must have hit the runway if not very close. I wouldn’t want to be a passenger in the plane. I would have had a heart attack. Bloody hell
This footage has gone viral. Best thing about being a plane spotter and catching these moments.
As Jerry said that looked good until it tilted to the left and moved into a tailstrike position...whoa!
Krikey, that was flippin’ unbelievable!
Kudos to the pilots skill, they got it under control and took off again quickly. I bet that takes some training and quick reflexes.
An instructive and important capture. Skills.
I'm no pilot just an aircraft tech but I believe that's why you apply crosswind correction even after initial touchdown I could be mistaken though.
Fair point Rayan. The generally face the wing into the wind on touchdown, but after the bounce and the aircraft becoming airborne again, he seemed to get caught by a sudden side gust?
That’s a superb upload , well done 👏🏽
WOW, definately a tail strike as you can see the horizontal stabilizer shudder, good catch and good camera work.
The horizontal stabilizer was destabilized… 😂
As has been established in other comments, it was very close but not a tailstrike
@@ryanhaart it bent the drain mast…just seen the photos!
@@ryanhaart Fortunately we are all entitled to an opinion and after reviewing the footage frame by frame I am sticking with my original view, yes it may only be a bit of scratched paint because there was only a small pale smoke cloud but it touched.
@@britannia-foundry it 100% wasn’t a strike. AAIB wouldn’t have let it fly to GVA if it was. Even if only paint.
Good catch, seeing your footage everywhere, hope it pays well
Well filmed,i reckon that tail missed the deck by about 10 m/m !!
Respect. 💯👍
Christ that was sooo close, unstable and pilot caught out right at the last minute. Amazing catch jerry and Gilly glad they saved it though ...oooo
Wow!!! Great video.
This one should go viral. ✈✈✈🌟🌟🌟
I would have absolutely 💩💩 myself if I had been on that plane…..amazing skills from the pilot…….been waiting for this since Jerry went live! Xx thanks so such a great show as always xx
The amazing skills is not by screwing the airplane like this tailstrike !!!
Awesome Job, You were in the right place at the right time. This clip was on SKY News this afternoon
That was super scary. Deep appreciation for pilot skills!
Code brown moment no doubt!
@@grahamcrabb7714 lol
Amazing capture Jerry 👏 😍
Wow - that's crazy! Nice catch Jerry! Great footage
Holy crap!! Well done that pilot!
How the hell are we not staring at a major accident! That pilot has some major cahoonas!!! Wow wow wow what skill to hold it well done!!! 👏
I've seen this around. You went viral! Good job!
Ryanair would of been proud of that landing 😂
@HistoryNews10 I’m sure they will see this as the joke that it is 😂
Hello Everyone, Glad to read some awesome and nice comments here. ❤️
Wow wow wow. That is nothing but pure pilot skill. Thank god that worked out well.
OMG!!!! Great catch!!!!! 😱😱
I could only imagine how the passangers had it. But again, it proves how well the planes are built now a days. Amazing, being so slow at the moment where made tail strike and still manage to regain the speed to make the go around. Great catch
What a ride for the pilots and passengers. Hope nobody was getting in a quick nap. That'll wake up dead,lol. Looked for a wing strike, but nope plenty of space between the ground and wing. As Jerry would say..."CAN YOU ADAM AND EVE IT?"