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jsmith wrote:
I cannot personally speak for the "a few hundred miles", but I have experienced mountain wave within ten nm of the lee side of the Appalachians in both North Carolina and Georgia. Maybe I shouldn't say "mountain wave". There is a definite vertical component to the air movement where I live, about 200-300 miles east of the Appalachians in NC, when the wind blows perpendicular to the ridges. If you're flying east-west, you are alternately pulling and pushing to maintain altitude as you pass from crest to trough of the waves. I'm *guessing* the time from push to pull is a minute or so, so that would make the wavelength about 5 nm at Mooney speeds. [Before someone else says it, yes, I know, efficiency can be improved by allowing altitude to vary and just staying trimmed for your airspeed.] Dave Dave Butler wrote: Here in NC you can get mountain waves a few hundred miles downwind from the Appalachians, though I've never experienced anything as severe as the OP describes. I think St Simons is too far south for Appalachian mountain waves, though. |
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