EPISODE · Apr 16, 2026 · 52 MIN
TACA Flight 110: A Remarkable Story of Survival and Aviation Excellence
from Radar Contact Lost: The Podcast · host Dave Gorham
Send us Fan MailOn Tuesday afternoon, May 24, 1988, Transportes Aéreos del Continente Americano (TACA) Flight 110 was painting thunderstorms and rain showers on the cockpit weather radar. The plane was enroute from San Salvador to New Orleans. It was a regularly scheduled flight, and the route across Central America and the Gulf of Mexico was routine. Cruising at about 35,000 feet (or 11,000 meters), no one onboard, not the crew and not the passengers, had any idea of what was about to happen. Only moments after the plane began its descent into the heavy rain showers and developing thunderstorms below, not one, but both engines flamed-out. TACA Flight 110 was now dead-sticking into heavy rain and thunderstorms. What had been a quiet and relaxing flight, had now become a flight into Hell. One that will likely result in a crash into the Gulf of Mexico, or maybe onto the land, with a loss of all passengers and crew. Except, that didn't happen.This is the story of TACA Flight 110 – a miraculous, dead-stick landing of a commercial airliner, with the crew fully expecting to land in Lake Pontchartrain next to the City of New Orleans. Instead, the crew spotted a narrow strip of levee, a dirt and grass strip of land barely wider than the plane itself, where they could attempt to land the plane, instead of ditching into the lake. The remarkable airmanship of the young pilot saved the plane and passengers, but what caused the dual flame-outs and why did the captain seemingly willingly fly into a thunderstorm? Radar Contact Lost examines the weather, the engines of the brand new 737 and celebrates one of the most remarkable emergency landings in aviation history.
What this episode covers
Send us Fan Mail On Tuesday afternoon, May 24, 1988, Transportes Aéreos del Continente Americano (TACA) Flight 110 was painting thunderstorms and rain showers on the cockpit weather radar. The plane was enroute from San Salvador to New Orleans. It was a regularly scheduled flight, and the route across Central America and the Gulf of Mexico was routine. Cruising at about 35,000 feet (or 11,000 meters), no one onboard, not the crew and not the passengers, had any idea of what was about to happe...
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TACA Flight 110: A Remarkable Story of Survival and Aviation Excellence
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