On 29 September 1940, during the
1940 Brocklesby mid-air collision, two
Avro Ansons became wedged together after colliding, one on top of the other. Both of the upper aircraft's engines had been knocked out in the collision but those of the one below continued to turn at full power. The pilot of the lower Anson was injured and bailed out, but the pilot of the upper Anson, Leonard Graham Fuller, found that he was able to control the piggybacking pair of aircraft with his ailerons and flaps. He managed to travel 8 kilometres (5 mi) after the collision before making a successful emergency belly landing in a large paddock 6 kilometres (4 mi) south-west of
Brocklesby, New South Wales, Australia. On 13 June 1991,
Korean Air Flight 376 (HL7350), a Boeing 727 operating a domestic flight from Jeju to
Daegu, performed an unexpected
gear-up landing at Daegu. The crew failed to read out the landing procedure checklist and therefore did not select the gear down option. Subsequent investigation revealed that the pilot instructed the co-pilot to pull the fuse case from the warning system because the repeated warnings that the landing gear was not deployed were "irritating and distracting". With the warning horn disabled, the South Korean pilot brought the plane in and slid down the length of the runway on the central structural rib in the belly of the aircraft. There were no serious injuries but the aircraft was written off. On 4 July 2000,
Malév Flight 262, a
Tupolev Tu-154, accidentally performed a gear-up touchdown during the landing and skidded on the runway, but was able to take off and land normally after a
go-around. No injuries were reported. On 9 April 2006, a
Canadair CL-215 water bomber sold by
Buffalo Airways to the Turkish government belly landed on the runway at
İzmir Adnan Menderes Airport when the Turkish pilots did not put the landing gear down. The hull was damaged in the crash and there were no injuries, but Buffalo had to fly in new drop doors to replace the ones damaged in the crash. On 8 May 2006, a United States Air Force
B-1 Lancer strategic bomber landed on the atoll of
Diego Garcia in the
Indian Ocean without lowering its undercarriage. A fire ensued, but was extinguished with only minor personnel injuries. The pilots had reportedly switched off the warning system that would have warned them of the oversight and overlooked the red warning light on the instrument panel throughout the landing. The aircraft, after nearly $8 million in repairs, was returned to service the following year. On 1 November 2011,
LOT Polish Airlines Flight 16, a
Boeing 767, Captain
Tadeusz Wrona declared an emergency with a loss of landing gear en route from
Newark Liberty International Airport to
Warsaw Chopin Airport. The aircraft involved was the newest 767 airframe in the fleet. It made a belly landing in Warsaw with a small fire, but all passengers and crew were evacuated with no injuries. The airport was closed for over a day afterwards. On 22 May 2020,
Pakistan International Airlines Flight 8303, an
Airbus A320, made a belly landing with landing gear not deployed due to pilot error. Though the crew attempted to perform a go-around, the belly landing had damaged both engines, which failed after the go-around. The plane crashed into a densely populated residential area near Karachi
Jinnah International Airport, killing 97 of 99 people aboard, as well as one on the ground. On 5 October 2023,
FedEx Flight 1376, a
Boeing 757 taking off from
Chattanooga Metropolitan Airport headed for
Memphis International Airport, was forced to return and conduct a belly landing after its gear was unable to lower. It skidded off the runway, with no injuries to the crew onboard. On 29 December 2024,
Jeju Air Flight 2216, a
Boeing 737-800 landing at
Muan Airport in
South Korea was forced to conduct a belly landing after what some reports currently suggest may have been a landing gear failure following a reported bird strike. The aircraft failed to stop on the runway, hitting a raised earthwork embankment and bursting into flames, killing 179 out of 181 onboard. On January 27, 2026, N927NA, a
Martin/General Dynamics WB-57F Canberra operated by
NASA was forced to perform a belly landing at
Ellington Field Joint Reserve Base due to a mechanical issue. Both crew members onboard survived with no injuries. The aircraft sustained significant damage, however it is unknown if it will be repaired or not ==References==