NTSB CAROL · Event
Event FTW98LA284
Aircraft involved
Probable cause & findings
The pilot's improper flare. Contributing to the accident was the sudden wind shift which rendered the aircraft uncontrollable when the aircraft was on final approach to land.
Factual narrative
On June 14, 1998, at 1930 mountain daylight time, a Schempp-Hirth, 27 horsepower motorized, Ventus CM glider, N94DP, sustained substantial damage during landing at Taos Municipal Airport, Taos, New Mexico. The commercial pilot and sole occupant was not injured. The flight was being operated under Title 14 CFR part 91 and no flight plan was filed. Visual meteorological conditions prevailed for this personal flight which departed Taos at 1415. According to the facility that is repairing the aircraft, both wings and the bottom side of the fuselage sustained substantial damage due to a hard landing. The occurrence was not classified as an accident until this assessment was completed on June 25, 1998. According to the pilot, he returned to land at 1930 and the wind shifted while he was on final approach. The pilot said the wind also increased in velocity and as a result the touchdown was hard and he cut is head on the instrument panel. Recorded wind during the time period of the accident was from 360 degrees magnetic heading at 24 knots with gusts to 37 knots. The landing was being conducted on runway 04. According to the pilot of a Beach Baron, who landed just before the accident occurred, the winds were out of the north at less than 10 knots during his landing. During final approach for landing the 27 horsepower motor glider was subjected to winds which increased from 10 knots to 24 knots with gusts to 37 knots. The landing was hard, causing damage to the wings and bottom of the fuselage. Source: NTSB Aviation Accident Database (Pre-2008 Archive) Retrieved: 2026-02-12
Verbatim from NTSB's published report. Source file
NTSB_1998_FTW98LA284.txt.
Findings + structured fields enriched from FAA avall.mdb.
Full investigation docket on
data.ntsb.gov ↗.
Beyond the agency record
Search this event elsewhere.
Pre-filled searches into the sources where news + community discussion of aviation events lives. External sources are reported, not agency. Treat them as signal that something happened, not as fact about what happened.
Entity-clustered aviation events in the press — last 24 hr + 30-day archive.
Official agency record + docket.
Investigative docket: factual reports, photos, transcripts.
Long-running aviation incident database (Flight Safety Foundation).
Community NTSB synthesis blog — often has photos and witness reports.
Gold-standard aviation incident blog.
Aviation industry news search.
GA pilot forum — informed but rumor-prone.
GA pilot subreddit search.
Tail-number page — flight history (free tier limited).
AOPA Air Safety Institute search.
Mainstream press coverage. Recent events only.
Privacy-preserving news search.
External links open in a new tab. We don't ingest their content; we deep-link search queries.