Quote:
that someone had posted pictures of the Guppy landing @ EFD, it touches down with the nose wheel.
When I went through B-29 Transition and then on to C-97 Transition in 1954, that's the way we were taught to land it. They told us that was the way Boing designed it.
Around 1955-1957 someone landed a KC-97 a little short on a runway that hadn't been fully backfilled after construction, leaving about a foot of concrete above ground. They snagged the nose gear on the lip. After a short roll out, the nose gear was intact but the tires were blown and all 4 engines upper mounts broke leaving the nacelles drooping and bending the prop blades. That was one strong nose gear!
The airplane could be landed main gear first but you had to be sure you had the nose up in the flare-out before you raked the power off. If you raked the power off and then tried to flare it out, a real firm touchdown was the result, like any other transport.