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On 2007-05-05 13:48:33 -0700, said:
http://www.thenewstribune.com/886/story/55281.html I would not depart in a thunderstorm no matter what I was flying. Hail can travel up to 20 miles from a thunderstorm. Thunderstorms are often surrounded by violent downdrafts called microbursts that will force any airplane down faster than it can climb. The lightning can blind pilots. The inside of a thunderstorm is darker than night, and the air currents throw you around like bucking bull. I have been inside thunderstorms more than once and each time it has nearly killed me. I stay as far away from them as I can. Departing in a thunderstorm is especially dangerous. You are too close to the ground and the thunderstorm can slam you right down into it. You can't see obstacles in the darkness and you can't maneuver well enough to avoid them easily. Hailstones will dent up the airplane, get sucked into the engines and kill them, and break things. Lightning can strike the airplane and even burn holes in the skin. If you get caught in the microburst you will hit the ground before you can fly out of it. Crewmembers can be thrown out of their chairs with such violence that it breaks bones and knocks them unconscious. Passengers who don't have their seatbelts fastened tightly can be badly hurt. Anything loose in the cabin becomes a deadly missile. I have never been slammed into the ground, but I have come very close. I have experienced all the other bad effects I have described. A thunderstorm frequently has all the energy of several atomic bombs. No airplane can withstand that. It is possible to fly into a thunderstorm and live -- I seem to attract them -- but they are still very dangerous. All of that said, it remains to be seen whether the aircraft you are referring to actually flew into a thunderstorm. A thunderstorm can be many miles away but it will seem right on top of you because they are so big. Rain is not a thunderstorm. Hail is caused by thunderstorms but, as I have noted, the thunderstorm might be 20 miles away. -- Waddling Eagle World Famous Flight Instructor |
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![]() "C J Campbell" wrote in message news:2007050614564343658-christophercampbell@hotmailcom... On 2007-05-05 13:48:33 -0700, said: http://www.thenewstribune.com/886/story/55281.html I would not depart in a thunderstorm no matter what I was flying. How many flights have you refused to board because of the weather? -- William Black I've seen things you people wouldn't believe. Barbeques on fire by the chalets past the castle headland I watched the gift shops glitter in the darkness off the Newborough gate All these moments will be lost in time, like icecream on the beach Time for tea. |
#4
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William Black wrote:
I would not depart in a thunderstorm no matter what I was flying. How many flights have you refused to board because of the weather? I once dumped an Apache in Fayetteville, NC because of collecting a pile of ice on the approach in. I called my boss, told him his Apache could be found in Fayetteville, and that I would be boarding a USAir flight shortly back to Charlotte. It's one thing to pick up ice on the approach; I was headed downhill anyway. It's a very different situation trying to climb through a freezing overcast and I wasn't going to do it. But I did climb on the USAir jet without hesitation. I figured it had deicing/anti-icing. It must have had something, because we made the flight home without any trouble. As an aside, I have launched many times immediately after a cell moved off the field, as long as it didn't move in the direction I intended to go. But I have never launched with one overhead. I don't know anybody who would. -- Mortimer Schnerd, RN mschnerdatcarolina.rr.com |
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