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We had a 12 hour gap of nice weather today between waves of storms
that have been pummeling Iowa (it's thunderstorming to beat the band again, as I'm typing this.). So, we took advantage of it, and went for a flight. Winds on the runway were minimal -- 120 at 5 knots. We took off on Rwy 12 and climbed through 1000' AGL, being roundly buffeted all the way. It was surprising, given the minimal surface winds. Then, at 2000' MSL, the turbulence stopped, and we were on top of a low haze layer. It was absolutely as smooth as sitting in your Barcolounger, and we settled in for a nice flight, climbing to 3000'. We could see the weather crap approaching from the South in the distance...but it would be no factor for a few more hours. I happened to glance at our GPS and was surprised to see our ground speed was just 79 knots. That's a 60 knot headwind -- yet it was as smooth as a baby's bottom. I then checked our outside air temperature, and was surprised to see that the temperature at 3000' was fully 15 degrees warmer than on the surface -- quite a temperature inversion for this time of year. Just for fun, I turned directly into the wind, and put Atlas into slow flight. I was able to get our groundspeed down to just 28 knots -- and then, turning 180 degrees back the other way, we almost instantly rocketed up to 180 knots! Again, there wasn't a ripple of turbulence throughout the maneuvers -- very unusual! And fun, of course... :-) -- Jay Honeck Iowa City, IA Pathfinder N56993 www.AlexisParkInn.com "Your Aviation Destination" |
#2
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the airflow had gone "laminar" above the boundary layer that you had the
rough ride to climb through air on the ground... 5 knots.. air at 2000ft 60 knts.. boundary layer.. at about 1700-1800 ft very rough BT "Jay Honeck" wrote in message ups.com... We had a 12 hour gap of nice weather today between waves of storms that have been pummeling Iowa (it's thunderstorming to beat the band again, as I'm typing this.). So, we took advantage of it, and went for a flight. Winds on the runway were minimal -- 120 at 5 knots. We took off on Rwy 12 and climbed through 1000' AGL, being roundly buffeted all the way. It was surprising, given the minimal surface winds. Then, at 2000' MSL, the turbulence stopped, and we were on top of a low haze layer. It was absolutely as smooth as sitting in your Barcolounger, and we settled in for a nice flight, climbing to 3000'. We could see the weather crap approaching from the South in the distance...but it would be no factor for a few more hours. I happened to glance at our GPS and was surprised to see our ground speed was just 79 knots. That's a 60 knot headwind -- yet it was as smooth as a baby's bottom. I then checked our outside air temperature, and was surprised to see that the temperature at 3000' was fully 15 degrees warmer than on the surface -- quite a temperature inversion for this time of year. Just for fun, I turned directly into the wind, and put Atlas into slow flight. I was able to get our groundspeed down to just 28 knots -- and then, turning 180 degrees back the other way, we almost instantly rocketed up to 180 knots! Again, there wasn't a ripple of turbulence throughout the maneuvers -- very unusual! And fun, of course... :-) -- Jay Honeck Iowa City, IA Pathfinder N56993 www.AlexisParkInn.com "Your Aviation Destination" |
#3
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the airflow had gone "laminar" above the boundary layer that you had the
rough ride to climb through air on the ground... 5 knots.. air at 2000ft 60 knts.. boundary layer.. at about 1700-1800 ft very rough Yeah, we've seen this before -- but not so low. Rain has stopped here...for now. They're still predicting more. Too bad we can't build a pipeline to the South. Oh, wait -- that's called "The Mississippi River"... :-) -- Jay Honeck Iowa City, IA Pathfinder N56993 www.AlexisParkInn.com "Your Aviation Destination" |
#4
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Jay Honeck wrote:
the airflow had gone "laminar" above the boundary layer that you had the rough ride to climb through air on the ground... 5 knots.. air at 2000ft 60 knts.. boundary layer.. at about 1700-1800 ft very rough Yeah, we've seen this before -- but not so low. Rain has stopped here...for now. They're still predicting more. Too bad we can't build a pipeline to the South. Oh, wait -- that's called "The Mississippi River"... :-) Don't worry we got the storms last night that are going to hit you guys tonight. |
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