Marion County Airport
Aircraft Accident/Incident Report

Dunnellon, Florida 34432
Tuesady, October 21, 2014 9:30 EDT

NTSB Narrative Summary Released at Completion of Accident

On October 21 2014, about 0930 eastern daylight time, an experimental research and development ITEC Maverick (powered parachute), N356MV, was destroyed in a postcrash ground fire following an inflight parachute malfunction at Marion County Airport (X35), Dunnellon, Florida. The private pilot was seriously injured and the passenger sustained minor injuries. Visual meteorological conditions prevailed, and no flight plan had been filed for the local demonstration flight which was operating under the provisions of 14 Code of Federal Regulations Part 91. According to the pilot, ITEC Inc. is a non-profit that develops tools and systems for emerging/frontier areas. An example besides the Maverick would be a backpack dental suite. The role of the company was not to sell products to make money, but to find solutions to assist people and governments. The accident aircraft was one of nine prototypes that been built, with deployments to Canada and Australia, and plans for Indonesia, Ecuador and Africa. Following the accident, all Mavericks were grounded until the accident cause could be found and correction(s) implemented. The concept of the Maverick involved driving a ground vehicle as far as possible to reach customers, then have the capability to hop over obstacles such as jungle canopies. The project was 7 years in development. The Maverick was a kit-built dune buggy, equipped with roll cage and racing seats, connected to a deployable powered parachute system. The vehicle was approved by two separate entities: the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) for the flying part, and the Florida Department of Motor Vehicles for the ground vehicle part. The aircraft was held aloft by a fabric wing that would fill with air. The wing shape was elliptical, which produced relatively high lift and a higher airspeed than would a square-shaped wing. However, the elliptical-shaped wing required perfect rigging, and had a lower margin of safety error than would a square wing. The pilot noted that if the project continues, there is consideration for changing the parachute to the square-wing type. Airborne, the Maverick is controlled by both, or separately, foot controls (pedals) and by a fly-by-wire servo controlled through the dune buggy's steering wheel, the latter of which can be turned off if needed. The pilot further noted that he had about 1,000 hours flying powered parachutes, with about 200 hours in the Maverick. On the morning of the accident, the pilot first solo'd another pilot. That pilot completed 10 takeoffs and landings, and after which, because it was a beautiful day, the accident pilot decided to give rides. He put a passenger in the back seat, and made a "normal" takeoff, climbing the aircraft to about 500 feet. As the aircraft was flying in level flight, it "all of a sudden, sharply" turned to the right with no control inputs. The pilot tried turning it to the left, but it still continued to the right. He thought about turning off the fly-by-wire servo, but realized that it wasn't the problem and wanted to keep using it to help rudder pedal inputs. As the aircraft passed 180 degrees of turn, the pilot realized it was coming down over trees. He had completely lost control, but did find that adding power added lift to the left side of the parachute and reducing power reduced the lift. At one point the parachute was parallel with the dune buggy, which would have been consistent with a cell blowout; and the pilot felt that he only had 1/3 of the wing. At another point, the pilot believes the cell pressurized briefly, which straightened the aircraft, allowing it to avoid the trees before hitting the ground. According to a witness, he saw the aircraft taxi and climb out, and after seeing they were "normal," stopped watching. He later heard a noise that was "not normal," and saw the aircraft in a descending spiral. He heard the engine go to full throttle, saw the aircraft briefly level off, then continue a "gradual spin" to the ground. Once the aircraft hit the ground, the fuel tank ruptured, which then resulted in a fire that consumed the parachute and partially consumed the dune buggy.

NTSB Probable Cause Narrative

Not Yet Reported

Event Information

Type of Event Accident
Event Date 10/21/2014
Event Day of the Week Tuesday
Time of Event 930
Event Time Zone Eastern Daylight Time
Event City Dunnellon
Event State FLORIDA
Event Country --
Zipcode of the event site 34432
Event Date Year 2014
Event Date Month 10
MidAir Collision Indicator No
On Ground Collision occurred ? No
Event Location Latitude 290402N
Event Location Longitude 0822236W
Event Location Airport Marion County Airport
Event Location Nearest Airport ID X35
Indicates whether the acc/inc occurred off or on an airport On Airport
Distance from airport in statute miles 0
Degrees magnetic from airport --
Airport Elevation 65
Weather Briefing Completeness --
Investigator's weather source Weather Observation Facility
Time of the weather observation 1353 Coordinated Universal Time? Same as GMT
Direction of event from weather observation facility (degrees) 120
Weather Observation Facility ID LEE
Elevation of weather observation facility 76
Distance of event from weather observation facility (units?) 33
Time Zone of the weather observation UTC
Lighting Conditions Day
Lowest Ceiling Height --
Lowest Non-Ceiling Height --
Sky/Lowest/Cloud Conditions Clear
Sky Condition for Lowest Ceiling None
Visibility Runway Visual Range (Feet) --
Visibility Runway Visual Value (Statute Miles) --
Visibility (Statute Miles) 10
Air Temperature at event time (in degrees celsius) 24
Dew Point at event time (in degress fahrenheit) 21
Wind Direction (degrees magnetic) --
Variable Wind Indicator --
Wind Speed (knots) --
Wind Velocity Indicator Calm
Wind Gust Indicator --
Wind Gust (knots) --
Altimeter Setting at event time (in. Hg) 29.99
Density Altitude (feet) --
Intensity of Precipitation --
METAR weather report KLEE 211353Z 00000KT 10SM CLR 24/21 A2999
Event Highest Injury Serious
On Ground, Fatal Injuries --
On Ground, Minor Injuries --
On Ground, Serious Injuries --
Injury Total Fatal --
Injury Total Minor 1
Injury Total None --
Injury Total Serious 1
Injury Total All 2
Investigating Agency NTSB
NTSB Docket Number (internal use) --
NTSB Notification Source FAA SROCC
NTSB Notification Date --
NTSB Notification Time --
Fiche Number and/or location -used to find docket information --
Date of most recent change to record Dec 15 2014 4:38PM
User who most recently changed record kenj
Basic weather conditions Visual Meteorological Cond
FAA District Office --

Aircraft Involved

Aircraft #1

Aircraft Registration Number N356MV
NTSB Number ERA15LA044
Missing Aircraft Indicator --
Federal Aviation Reg. Part Part 91: General Aviation
Type of Flight Plan filed None
Flight plan Was Activated? No
Damage Destroyed
Aircraft Fire Ground
Aircraft Explosion None
Aircraft Manufacturer's Full Name ITEC INC
Aircraft Model MAVERICK
Aircraft Series Identifier --
Aircraft Serial Number MAV1
Certified Max Gross Weight 1800
Aircraft Category --
Aircraft Registration Class --
Aircraft is a homebuilt? Yes
Flight Crew Seats 1
Cabin Crew Seats --
Passenger Seats 2
Total number of seats on the aircraft 3
Number of Engines 1
Fixed gear or retractable gear Fixed
Aircraft, Type of Last Inspection Conditional
Date of Last Inspection Apr 16 2014 12:00AM
Airframe hours since last inspection 27
Airframe Hours 101
ELT Installed No
ELT Activated Unknown
ELT Aided Location of Event Site Unknown
ELT Type --
Aircraft Owner Name ITEC INC
Aircraft Owner Street Address 10575 SW 147TH CIR
Aircraft Owner City DUNNELLON
Aircraft Owner State FL
Aircraft Owner Country USA
Aircraft Owner Zipcode 344324772
Operator is an individual? No
Operator Name ITEC INC
Operator Same as Owner? Yes
Operator Is Doing Business As --
Operator Address Same as Owner? Yes
Operator Street Address 10575 SW 147TH CIR
Operator City DUNNELLON
Operator State FL
Operator Country USA
Operator Zip code 344324772
Operator Code --
Owner has at least one certificate None
Other Operator of large aircraft? --
Certified for Part 133 or 137 Operation --
Operator Certificate Number --
Indicates whether an air carrier operation was scheduled or not --
Indicates Domestic or International Flight --
Operator carrying Pax/Cargo/Mail --
Type of Flying (Per_Bus / Primary) Other Work Use
Second Pilot on Board No
Departure Point Same as Event Yes
Departure Airport Code X35
Departure City Dunnellon
Departure State FL
Departure Country USA
Departure Time 930
Departure Time Zone EDT
Destination Same as Local Flt dest & departure same, accident can occur anywhere
Destination Airport Code X35
Destination City Dunnellon
Destination State FL
Destination Country USA
Specific Phase of Flight --
Report sent to ICAO? --
Evacuation occurred --
Date of most recent change to record Dec 15 2014 4:39PM
User who most recently changed record kenj
Since inspection or accident Time of Accident
Event Location Runway Number and Location 32
Runway Length 5000
Runway Width 100
Sight Seeing flight No
Air Medical Flight No
Medical Flight --