Incredible cockpit footage shows the hair-raising moment a pilot lands in the middle of Storm Eunice.
During the peak of the killer storm which took at least four lives in the UK, a pilot had to battle record winds and blustery conditions to reach the tarmac.
Flying a Boeing 777 aeroplane, one captain nailed the landing despite the rocky conditions.
Captain of Qatar plane, Khalifa Al-Thani managed to land the world’s largest twinjet craft at Heathrow Airport despite the recording breaking winds the storm brought.
Flying into the UK on Friday, February 18, the pilot caught it all on camera from inside his own cockpit.
The footage shows the pilot constantly adjusting and readjusting the plane’s path as it approaches the runway.
Thanks to the blustery wind, to keep the craft level the pilot can be seen constantly checking his readouts inside the cockpit.
Alongside the internal footage showing the pilot, a stream from Big Jet TV shows the outside of the plane as it comes into land.
The independent YouTube channel shot to viral fame during Storm Eunice as it filmed planes coming into land at Heathrow during the high winds.
Viewers flocked to the channel to see the dramatic commentary as plane enthusiast Jerry Dyer filmed the planes coming into land.
Reaching over 200,000 people at its peak, the channel became an unlikely star of the storm.
Dyer can be heard commentating as the Qatar plane comes into land, gasping as the plane flexes in the wind - a purposeful design feature.
In spite of the blustery conditions and record high winds recorded during the storm, the pilot landed the plane fine.
This comes as the UK was battered by three storms in one week, with Storm Franklin following on from Storms Dudley and Eunice.
Record 122mph winds were felt as four people tragically died from accidents involving debris and falling trees.
This morning, the country woke up to severe flooding in many parts of the North West, with over 400 Manchester residents forced to evacuate their houses in the early hours of the morning as the River Mersey burst its banks.
Despite the severe conditions, the worst of Storm Franklin is thought to be behind us, with the BBC reporting most areas' storm peak coming last night into early this morning.
The Met Office said that as the day goes on conditions will settle towards and beyond midday.