Ted
The pilot formerly known as Twin Engine Ted
- Joined
- Oct 9, 2007
- Messages
- 29,999
- Display Name
Display name:
iFlyNothing
Dave's Go/No-Go Decision thread in Hangar Talk got me thinking. When talking with Tony sometime last year he said he was of the opinion that one of the biggest things the instrument rating did was make go/no-go decisions significantly harder. Adding on things like on-board RADAR, FIKI, multi-engine, and pressurization and the decision can get more difficult still. I find hearing how others plan through their decision making to be very educational in terms of thought processes and information resources used. So, one idea I had was starting a thread for flights people made, what contributed to the go/no-go decision, resources used, and the overall outcome. I'll start.
A few weeks back I had a dog rescue scheduled from Rock Hill, SC (KUZA) to Syracuse, NY (KSYR). The flight was originally planned for Sunday. One resource I look at to get some idea a few days out of general weather conditions is the GFS MOS forecasts, found here:
http://www.nws.noaa.gov/mdl/synop/products.php
Click on the "Short-Range GFS MOS (MAV) 6-84 hours" forecast graphics, found here:
http://www.nws.noaa.gov/mdl/forecast/graphics/MAV/index.html
By Thursday night, two things on the Sunday prediction were looking pretty bad. Specifically, there were low ceilings forecasted over the entire route of flight, including at or below minimums for Williamsport. There was also a high probability of precipitation (>70%) over a good sum of the route of flight, with freezing precipitation predicted at 20-40% between Williamsport and Syracuse. Having no desire to have my plane turn into an ice cube, I decided to do the flight on Saturday instead, which looked to have high (if not unlimited) ceilings over the entire route of flight.
Saturday morning a quick check of the weather showed perfect VFR conditions forecasted for the whole route of flight. Sure enough, not a single cloud in the sky the whole flight down (which was Friday night) or back (Saturday morning). Sunday morning I woke up, went to let the dogs out, and my deck was a giant sheet of ice, as was the rest of my property. The ceilings weren't as bad as forecasted (that's pretty typical), but the freezing rain definitely was there, with icing AIRMETs surface to FL200 over the entire route of flight and Skew-Ts looking pretty nasty. I opted to not leave the house for the day.
The decision was pretty easy given the forecast for Sunday and the fact that Saturday was supposed to be so much nicer. Specifically of concern was the freezing rain. The hardest part was inconveniencing people last-minute by changing the date, specifically making it a day earlier. I think a change to my SOP for the flights now will be planning to do the flight north on a Saturday instead of Sunday, using Sunday as a backup day. It's a lot easier to push things back a day than forward. The final call is always made last-minute, but since a lot of people are involved it helps to be able to make as much of a call as you can early on.
A few weeks back I had a dog rescue scheduled from Rock Hill, SC (KUZA) to Syracuse, NY (KSYR). The flight was originally planned for Sunday. One resource I look at to get some idea a few days out of general weather conditions is the GFS MOS forecasts, found here:
http://www.nws.noaa.gov/mdl/synop/products.php
Click on the "Short-Range GFS MOS (MAV) 6-84 hours" forecast graphics, found here:
http://www.nws.noaa.gov/mdl/forecast/graphics/MAV/index.html
By Thursday night, two things on the Sunday prediction were looking pretty bad. Specifically, there were low ceilings forecasted over the entire route of flight, including at or below minimums for Williamsport. There was also a high probability of precipitation (>70%) over a good sum of the route of flight, with freezing precipitation predicted at 20-40% between Williamsport and Syracuse. Having no desire to have my plane turn into an ice cube, I decided to do the flight on Saturday instead, which looked to have high (if not unlimited) ceilings over the entire route of flight.
Saturday morning a quick check of the weather showed perfect VFR conditions forecasted for the whole route of flight. Sure enough, not a single cloud in the sky the whole flight down (which was Friday night) or back (Saturday morning). Sunday morning I woke up, went to let the dogs out, and my deck was a giant sheet of ice, as was the rest of my property. The ceilings weren't as bad as forecasted (that's pretty typical), but the freezing rain definitely was there, with icing AIRMETs surface to FL200 over the entire route of flight and Skew-Ts looking pretty nasty. I opted to not leave the house for the day.
The decision was pretty easy given the forecast for Sunday and the fact that Saturday was supposed to be so much nicer. Specifically of concern was the freezing rain. The hardest part was inconveniencing people last-minute by changing the date, specifically making it a day earlier. I think a change to my SOP for the flights now will be planning to do the flight north on a Saturday instead of Sunday, using Sunday as a backup day. It's a lot easier to push things back a day than forward. The final call is always made last-minute, but since a lot of people are involved it helps to be able to make as much of a call as you can early on.