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#51
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VFR "picking his way thru" heavy cells with XM Radio weather
Mxsmanic wrote in
: Peter R. writes: Not only do I have the tail-id but I also have the exact exchange, thanks to LiveATC.net's 40-day archive. However, Larry, I am not going to be the one to report anyone, since IMO this is quite a gray area. I personally have a very different take on reporting pilots to the FAA. You'd prefer that he die in a thunderstorm instead? For education purposes, though, I thought it might be beneficial to retrieve and edit the archive files into a short clip (and also removing the majority of the tail ID so the resulting clip cannot be used against the pilot) with the relevant content. When I have the clip, I will post it to a file sharing site and the link to this thread. You seem very worried about protecting the pilot--but you're not protecting him in the right way. How would you know, fjukkwit? You don't fly. Bertie |
#52
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VFR "picking his way thru" heavy cells with XM Radio weather
Larry Dighera wrote:
Without knowledge of the locations of the cells, I agree, it's difficult to know just how much danger the pilot was in, but when he turned south to wait out the weather it would seem that he'd have to have gone right through them. Did he turn south into the cells? But who knows? That was exactly my point. John Galban=====N4BQ (PA28-180) -- Message posted via AviationKB.com http://www.aviationkb.com/Uwe/Forums...ation/200706/1 |
#53
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VFR "picking his way thru" heavy cells with XM Radio weather
In article . com,
Luke Skywalker wrote: Airline radars are so much better because of power and antenna size then General Aviation radars...but even they are no match for the power and resultion of even ATC radars in terms of WX. ATC radars are air search not so much WX but with modern technology the WX information can be "used" before it is stripped off for primary target display. Robert, I read much of what Dave Gwinn said in his AvWeb podcast in your post. :-) Dave also mentions asking the ATC controller to press his "Weather 3" key and describe the "slashes and H's" along your route. |
#54
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VFR "picking his way thru" heavy cells with XM Radio weather
On Jun 5, 4:31 pm, john smith wrote:
Robert, I read much of what Dave Gwinn said in his AvWeb podcast in your post. :-) Dave also mentions asking the ATC controller to press his "Weather 3" key and describe the "slashes and H's" along your route. Thank you. I am a pilot by profession and joy but an engineer (and a military history person) by education....and I am a ham radio operator...and a RF radar engineer. "Weather 3" is a good key...the new ASR displays are quite good...and there is some software coming along which will marry all the Nexrad/ ASR stuff and to do it from a lot of different sites. I am frequently amazed from a "personal" perspective what happens if you put a "picture" before someone. It becomes "the almighty truth" regardless of the limitations of what the picture says. WX information is just that... I dont know how many times I have sat with new first officers or upgrading captains or private pilots in new twins or ones with stuff like 396's...and they see the picture and have no real idear about what the limitations are. I rode shotgun one time with a guy in his new (to him) Cessna 400 series twin and he saw the picture and was buying everything just right down the line. All this stuff is good as long as one understands what the "limits" are...the words of Inspector Calahan seem to hold true..."A man has got to know his limitations" Robert |
#55
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VFR "picking his way thru" heavy cells with XM Radio weather
"Dylan Smith" wrote in message
... .... ... I hate to think what the ride would be like only 10 miles from that storm! -- Yes, the Reply-To email address is valid. Oolite-Linux: an Elite tribute: http://oolite-linux.berlios.de No one has mentioned the phenomena where hail is thrown out of the top or side of the really big CB and may be tossed for miles, and its really not that uncommon. -- Jim Carter Rogers, Arkansas |
#56
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VFR "picking his way thru" heavy cells with XM Radio weather
On Tue, 05 Jun 2007 17:10:40 -0700, Luke Skywalker
wrote in . com: "A man has got to know his limitations" Or in this case, the limitations of his equipment. |
#57
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VFR "picking his way thru" heavy cells with XM Radio weather
On Jun 5, 8:44 pm, Larry Dighera wrote:
On Tue, 05 Jun 2007 17:10:40 -0700, Luke Skywalker wrote in . com: "A man has got to know his limitations" Or in this case, the limitations of his equipment. so true. I love that scene from Eastwood...The three minutes or so "before" all the way to the words being spoken is something I recommend for all pilots...lol Robert |
#58
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VFR "picking his way thru" heavy cells with XM Radio weather
On Tue, 5 Jun 2007 20:26:59 -0500, "Jim Carter"
wrote in : No one has mentioned the phenomena where hail is thrown out of the top or side of the really big CB and may be tossed for miles, and its really not that uncommon. I mentioned that I was trained to skirt CBs by 20 miles. Of course, that is the reason. It's often difficult to maintain good situational awareness of the buildups if you are in VMC under a cell's base, or the buildups begin to merge. http://www.weather.com/encyclopedia/thunder/hail.html Hail Hail is precipitation in the form of a chunk of ice that can fall from a cumulonimbus cloud. Usually associated with multicell, supercell and cold front induced squall line thunderstorms, most hail falls from the central region of a cloud in a severe storm. Hail begins as tiny ice pellets that collide with water droplets. The optimum freezing level for the formation of hail is from 8,000 to 10,000 feet. The water droplets attach themselves to the ice pellets and begin to freeze as strong updraft winds toss the pellets and droplets back up into the colder regions of the upper levels of the cloud. As the attached droplets freeze, the pellets become larger. Both gravity and downdraft thunderstorm winds pull the pellets back down, where they encounter more droplets that attach and freeze as the pellets are thrown, once again, back up through the cloud. Hailstones The more times a hailstone is tossed up and down through the cloud, the larger the hailstone will be. Hailstones the size of softballs had many more trips up and down through the cloud than pea-sized hailstones. Large hailstones are an indication of powerful updraft and downdraft winds within a thunderstorm. This is why large hail is associated with severe thunderstorms. To create pea-size hail (about 1/2 inch in diameter) winds within the thunderstorm updraft will generally be around 20 miles per hour. Quarter size hail (3/4 of an inch in diameter) requires updrafts of about 40 miles per hour. Golf ball size hail (1 3/4 inches in diameter) needs updrafts of around 55 miles per hour and softball size hail, approximately 100 miles per hour! ... |
#59
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VFR "picking his way thru" heavy cells with XM Radio weather
("Larry Dighera" wrote)
"A man has got to know his limitations" Or in this case, the limitations of his equipment. "I WAS IN THE POOL!" "I WAS IN THE POOL!" "I WAS IN THE POOL!" Montblack |
#60
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VFR "picking his way thru" heavy cells with XM Radio weather
"Larry Dighera" wrote: I mentioned that I was trained to skirt CBs by 20 miles. Of course, that is the reason. Maintaining such a hard rule WRT to *all* CBs would make flyng a very difficult proposition down South in the summertime, as Dylan has pointed out. Not all CBs need such a wide berth. It's often difficult to maintain good situational awareness of the buildups if you are in VMC under a cell's base, or the buildups begin to merge. That's what XM WX is for, praised be its name! -- Dan ? at BFM |
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