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Yesterday we planned on a proposed flight 50 miles away for dinner with
a light GA airplane newbie on board . The radar at home showed a very narrow band of showers to the Northwest on a SW - NE line marching SE towards us. The rain was limited to the lightest 2 green shades with an occasional yellow dot showing here and there. In my experience, this is usually light if it makes it to the surface at all. It looked like it would take about 3-4 hours plus to arrive given its speed of advance. Normally, I would make the "go decision" based on this and launch. We went off to the airport and prepared the plane for the trip. Once the 396 had acquired weather data on the ground, it already showed the once narrow band of green to be a much wider band of nearly solid yellow with a few orange dots growing. This is usually some pretty moderate to heavy rain and I was uncomfortable in challenging it. So, we went up locally to show the newbie the wonders of the sky since the rain was several hours away and the local skies were high broken. I did not do a whole lot of testing, but the sat reception after upgrading to SW version 3.2 was much improved. Many more sats near the top. Never lost sat lock. After a while, the rain band got wider still and I was convinced I did the right thing scrubbing. We may have made it there and back, but it would be awfully close. Then, the animation on the 396 looked like the line had actually sped up in its Southeast track. I was now positive I made the right choice. Having this information in front of me was invaluable. Ordinarily, we would have made the trip because we would not have known about the deteriorating conditions. As the heavy rain would have started hitting the windshield, I would have been torn between pressing on (with the old radar information) or turning around because it had obviously changed. As a funny aside, the rain did speed up and arrived 1.5 hours later. However, right after we landed, the rain mass began to deteriorate again to very light stuff. Our entire route saw only a few drops here and there. This was a good illustration of how quickly things can change and how valuable this info in the cockpit can be. I am definitely keeping this thing! Thanks, Mike |
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