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U.S. Airman Forced to Belly-Land A-10 Warthog After Canopy Blows, Landing Gear Fails
On July 20, Capt. Brett DeVries of the Michigan Air National Guard was forced to land his A-10 Warthog with the landing gear up and no canopy after the aircraft's gun malfunctioned, wreaking havoc on systems across the entire plane. The belly landing took place at the Alpena Combat Readiness Training Center in northern Michigan. DeVries, an A-10 pilot with the 107th Fighter Squadron stationed at Selfridge Air National Guard Base just north of Detroit, was able to safely exit the aircraft after the emergency landing, and no injuries resulted from the incident.
DeVries and fellow airmen from the 107th, known as the "Red Devils," were on a training flight to drop dummy bombs and conduct strafe runs at Grayling Air Gunnery Range. Four A-10s dropped their dummy ordnance during the routine training flight and then circled around to make a strafing pass. On his strafing run, DeVries' A-10 Thunderbolt II, affectionately called the Warthog for its rugged appearance, suffered a major malfunction after the aircraft's 30mm GAU-8 Avenger Gatling-style autocannon blew out, creating a "donut of gas," as reported by DeVries' wingman Major Shannon Vickers. The malfunction caused the canopy of DeVries' A-10 to blow while flying about 325 knots (374 mph), slamming his head back into the cockpit seat.
"It was like someone sucker punched me," DeVries recalls in a recent report of the incident. "I was just dazed for a moment."