View Full Version : An Icy Commute
Michelle P
December 2nd 05, 01:26 AM
Well this evening I had an interesting commute home. I flew into
freezing rain.
THe forecast called for a perfect day of flying. Light wind lots of
sunshine. It did not call for any precip today.
I was flying my usual evening controller busy route home. This would be
W32, FRZ exit waypoint, Stafford 3000 MSL ( to go around the Quanitco
restricted areas) then home to CJR. When I turned the corner at Stafford
I noticed something out of the corner of my eye when the strobes
flashed. I turned on the landing light and sure enough it was rain. A
quick check of the thermometer caused concern. It was reading 0 Celsius.
I pulled out the flashlight and had a look at the wings struts. Nothing
yet. I checked a few minutes later. ICE!. I immediately descending to
2000 MSL. The temp went up 1 degree Celsius. That was enough, the ice
stopped.
Once I landed and pulled up to the hangar I check the airframe. It still
had a little ice on it.
Now that was an interesting commute.
Michelle
Michael Ware
December 2nd 05, 01:55 AM
Wow, glad you made it down OK. How far from your destination airport were
you (miles/minutes) when you first noticed the ice? Would you have had any
good options if it really had been accumulating?
--
Hello, my name is Mike, and I am an airplane addict...
"Michelle P" > wrote in message
nk.net...
> Well this evening I had an interesting commute home. I flew into
> freezing rain.
><snip>
> Now that was an interesting commute.
> Michelle
Jay Honeck
December 2nd 05, 04:52 AM
> Now that was an interesting commute.
Glad you made it okay. We've only run into icing once, and that was more
than enough.
--
Jay Honeck
Iowa City, IA
Pathfinder N56993
www.AlexisParkInn.com
"Your Aviation Destination"
Michelle P
December 2nd 05, 12:37 PM
Michael,
I was about 20 miles from home when I noticed the precip and about 15
when I started descending. Normally at this point I am dropped by ATC
since i am clear of the ADIZ. I opted to stay with them. I had several
airport around me to land and a couple behind me if necessary. The rain
was light so the ice was not accumulating too quickly. I was not
seriously worried yet, but I was getting there. I have been in a
situation where I accumulated an inch of ice on the airframe in 5
minutes during an approach. We went missed and made a slow painful climb
on top. It took about 45 minutes to get rid of that amount of ice.
Michelle
Michael Ware wrote:
>Wow, glad you made it down OK. How far from your destination airport were
>you (miles/minutes) when you first noticed the ice? Would you have had any
>good options if it really had been accumulating?
>
>
>
G Farris
December 2nd 05, 10:13 PM
In article t>,
says...
>
>
>Well this evening I had an interesting commute home. I flew into
>freezing rain.
>THe forecast called for a perfect day of flying. Light wind lots of
>sunshine. It did not call for any precip today.
>I was flying my usual evening controller busy route home. This would be
>W32, FRZ exit waypoint, Stafford 3000 MSL ( to go around the Quanitco
>restricted areas) then home to CJR. When I turned the corner at Stafford
>I noticed something out of the corner of my eye when the strobes
>flashed. I turned on the landing light and sure enough it was rain. A
>quick check of the thermometer caused concern. It was reading 0 Celsius.
>I pulled out the flashlight and had a look at the wings struts. Nothing
>yet. I checked a few minutes later. ICE!. I immediately descending to
>2000 MSL. The temp went up 1 degree Celsius. That was enough, the ice
>stopped.
>Once I landed and pulled up to the hangar I check the airframe. It still
>had a little ice on it.
>
>Now that was an interesting commute.
>Michelle
Good story - good ending.
You're flying a C-152 or something, right?
GF
Flyingmonk
December 3rd 05, 01:26 AM
Hi Michelle,
>THe forecast called for a perfect day of flying. Light wind lots of
>sunshine. It did not call for any precip today.
Glad you're OK.
I live in your 'work' area, Nothern Virginia. You know what they
say... If you don't like the weather here in NOVA, just wait a minute.
Michelle P
December 3rd 05, 02:17 AM
I fly a Maule M-7-235. Lots of excess power. It name from Maule is the
Super Rocket.
Michelle
G Farris wrote:
>
>
>Good story - good ending.
>You're flying a C-152 or something, right?
>
>GF
>
>
>
Michelle P
December 3rd 05, 02:19 AM
If you see a C-172 over you head during your commute there is a 33%
chance it is me flying.
Tune in 122.75 and listen in we are always talking to each other.
Michelle
Flyingmonk wrote:
>Hi Michelle,
>
>
>
>>THe forecast called for a perfect day of flying. Light wind lots of
>>sunshine. It did not call for any precip today.
>>
>>
>
>Glad you're OK.
>
>I live in your 'work' area, Nothern Virginia. You know what they
>say... If you don't like the weather here in NOVA, just wait a minute.
>
>
>
Flyingmonk
December 3rd 05, 03:20 AM
If I had a handheld I would :<)
BTW What do you do? traffic report? Which station? Who is the
reporter? One of my helo instructor is the one that flies the Fox5
Chopper, Jerrami (Spell?).
Michelle P
December 4th 05, 01:02 AM
I fly the plane form the right seat and we go clockwise around the
beltway. You can thank Walt Starling (RIP) for that. The reporter I
usually fly reports live on WTOP 8-10 and sometimes 15-17. If I fly the
early run 6-9 the reporter is live on WMAL.
Michelle
Flyingmonk wrote:
>If I had a handheld I would :<)
>
>BTW What do you do? traffic report? Which station? Who is the
>reporter? One of my helo instructor is the one that flies the Fox5
>Chopper, Jerrami (Spell?).
>
>
>
Flyingmonk
December 4th 05, 02:31 PM
Cool... are you also a CFI?
Michelle P
December 4th 05, 03:24 PM
No, I do not want the liability.
Michelle
Flyingmonk wrote:
>Cool... are you also a CFI?
>
>
>
Victor J. Osborne, Jr.
December 7th 05, 03:50 AM
Had one run in w/ freezing rain. I have a new plane and a story to go with
it.
After descending thru a 2,000 ft cloud layer with light rime, we turned
final for the SDF approach and entered the hardest rain I'd experienced. We
could not stop the decent at the DH after only 3 1/2 minutes. It was
freezing rain.
The safety sheets all say "unless it is freezing rain, no reason to panic,
just do something about it. etc etc." Another says freezing rain can be
measured in inches per minute. I believe them
Glad you're okay.
Thx, {|;-)
Victor J. (Jim) Osborne, Jr.
"Michelle P" > wrote in message
nk.net...
> Well this evening I had an interesting commute home. I flew into freezing
> rain.
> Once I landed and pulled up to the hangar I check the airframe. It still
> had a little ice on it.
>
> Now that was an interesting commute.
> Michelle
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