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Landing gear incident . The Cape Air flight was flight number 1833, which was scheduled to depart Boston Logan International Airport (BOS) in Massachusetts at approximately 14:30 local time and ...
No landing gear was seen under the nose or right wing. The plane, a Cessna 402C, veered to one side after touching down. The Cape Air flight departed Boston for Bar Harbor, Maine, at 2:22 p.m ...
Cape Air said the pilot "was alerted to a landing gear anomaly shortly after take-off." Just after 3:15 p.m., the Cessna 402 returned to Logan with emergency crews standing by. WBZ-TV's helicopter ...
WFAA's helicopter captured the emergency landing on camera, which was prompted by a landing gear malfunction. A twin-engine Cessna that hadn't flown in 25 years made the landing due to a landing ...
Massport said in a statement that there were two passengers and one crew member aboard the Cape Air Cessna 402 that took off from Boston Logan and then returned with a “landing gear issue.” ...
The pilot of a single-engine Cessna 177 reported the rear landing gear issue shortly before 12:30 p.m. Redmond Fire & Rescue Fire Marshal Tom Mooney said.