So I quickly look at the essentials first: hours, deferred and past defects, oil on both engines, tires and do a quick inspection of everything else.
Everyone else comes through the door and by that time I have changed into my pilot shirt and tie, a real tie not those pretentious clip-on ties.
*shivers*
There's four aircraft in total flying North. Fire evacuations have been started and half of our fleet is dispatched. Hurray for some night flying.
We get there at midnight and after the UNorganized chaos of rushing passengers and designating airplanes for them. We fuel and load up, start up and taxi out. Takeoff and back home we go.
The most eventful part of the return leg was the fact that I tried to kill all the mosquitoes that checked into our airplane before I get 100 bites in the 2 hours and change of a flight.
Drop them off and return to base. It's 3:30am by that time and we're all ready to go home.
Gear down landing checks. I go through the sequence...read the checklist. Gear...NOT 3 green. Great just what we needed; Neither of us said that aloud but I'm sure we were both thinking it. He gave me control and troubleshooted the problem. I orbited on top of the airport at circuit altitude, good thing towers closed now.
Tried switching bulbs, no joy.
Tried recycling gear, no luck amigo.
Tried emergency pump, nothing.
Gear handle snapback suggests Hydraulic pressure is good.
Tried pulling g's to lock left main gear to place, still 2 greens.
Luckily, 3 of the other pilots were still on the ground so we tried our best to do a low pass and check it out. All three agreed that it looks good.
He takes control back for landing and i get ready on the mixtures and other stuff in case it collapses. Land taxi shutdown normally. Thank geebus.
Nothing like a gear problem to wake you up at 4am.
Another day, livin' the dream....
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