Narrative:

I was the pilot flying and we commenced a takeoff. Upon rotation I noticed a failure of flight instruments (HSI and RMI) along with the stick shaker warning. Immediately I said to my copilot that I have no flight instruments and that I was flying by standby gyro and compass. We told ATC that we needed to return for landing due to flight instrument issues. We took into effect that we were going to make an overweight landing (approximately 3;000-4;000 pounds) and commenced a short base to final for a visual approach. Upon landing we parked at a holding pad and contacted dispatch and maintenance; at that point we realized that the IRS's were in the off position. After we initiated a full alignment; we contacted dispatch and maintenance control to appraise them of the situation. We completed a full alignment and that seemed to alleviate all the flight instrument issues. Once the flight instruments seemed to be corrected; we taxied back to the FBO to make logbook entries and allow the flight mechanic to do an overweight landing inspection without a hard landing. We were in constant contact with dispatch and once the necessary inspection and paperwork were complete; we continued the scheduled flights per dispatch.

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Original NASA ASRS Text

Title: B737-400 Captain experienced failure of his HSI and RMI upon rotation. The flight returned to the departure airport for an overweight landing; where it is discovered that the IRSs were never aligned prior to takeoff.

Narrative: I was the pilot flying and we commenced a takeoff. Upon rotation I noticed a failure of flight instruments (HSI and RMI) along with the stick shaker warning. Immediately I said to my copilot that I have no flight instruments and that I was flying by Standby gyro and compass. We told ATC that we needed to return for landing due to flight instrument issues. We took into effect that we were going to make an overweight landing (approximately 3;000-4;000 pounds) and commenced a short base to final for a visual approach. Upon landing we parked at a holding pad and contacted Dispatch and Maintenance; at that point we realized that the IRS's were in the off position. After we initiated a full alignment; we contacted Dispatch and Maintenance Control to appraise them of the situation. We completed a full alignment and that seemed to alleviate all the flight instrument issues. Once the flight instruments seemed to be corrected; we taxied back to the FBO to make logbook entries and allow the flight mechanic to do an overweight landing inspection without a hard landing. We were in constant contact with Dispatch and once the necessary inspection and paperwork were complete; we continued the scheduled flights per Dispatch.

Data retrieved from NASA's ASRS site and automatically converted to unabbreviated mixed upper/lowercase text. This report is for informational purposes with no guarantee of accuracy. See NASA's ASRS site for official report.