![]() |
If this is your first visit, be sure to check out the FAQ by clicking the link above. You may have to register before you can post: click the register link above to proceed. To start viewing messages, select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below. |
|
|
Thread Tools | Display Modes |
#1
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
So I have a friend going out to Red Deer Alberta to so some industial
air flow measurements of a sort. In his calculations he must enter the atmospheric pressure. I thought, no problem, just get it from the metar for Red Deer. Red Deer is 3000 odd feet asl. If they are reporting 29.92 is the actual pressure some three inches lower? But that is corrected for temperature. Perhaps just use the pressure at the end, I think it is in Hectopascals but is also corrected to Sea Level. What is the actual station pressure he should use? John |
#2
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Opps, meant to put this in the piloting group. Oh well, same crowd. Sorry.
The Visitor wrote: So I have a friend going out to Red Deer Alberta to so some industial air flow measurements of a sort. In his calculations he must enter the atmospheric pressure. I thought, no problem, just get it from the metar for Red Deer. Red Deer is 3000 odd feet asl. If they are reporting 29.92 is the actual pressure some three inches lower? But that is corrected for temperature. Perhaps just use the pressure at the end, I think it is in Hectopascals but is also corrected to Sea Level. What is the actual station pressure he should use? John |
#3
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Sep 12, 6:20 pm, The Visitor wrote:
Opps, meant to put this in the piloting group. Oh well, same crowd. Sorry. The Visitor wrote: So I have a friend going out to Red Deer Alberta to so some industial air flow measurements of a sort. In his calculations he must enter the atmospheric pressure. I thought, no problem, just get it from the metar for Red Deer. Red Deer is 3000 odd feet asl. If they are reporting 29.92 is the actual pressure some three inches lower? But that is corrected for temperature. Perhaps just use the pressure at the end, I think it is in Hectopascals but is also corrected to Sea Level. What is the actual station pressure he should use? John- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - The volume of replies is stunning... I suspect the gang smells a troll... However I am full of the milk of human kindness this AM... So,here is the answer: Kindly purchase any version of the private pilots exam preparation book or CD, such as that from the Kings, et. al. and all your questions will be answered... denny |
#4
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
No, not trolling.
My friend is convinced that the altimeter setting, which is corrected to sea level (?) would be incorrect to use. Also incorrect would be the Sea Level Pressure listed at the end of a Metar as it is also corrected to sea level. (Surface analysis maps also.) He needs the absolute station pressure not corrected to anything. I told him to use that but he feels he should be taking off three odd inches to come up with the actual pressure. I told him that lapse rate is an average used in an air mass, not at the bottom of an air mass along the ground. valid say if he climbed a 1000 foot tower. But I say anytime you have a station pressure of 26 to 27 inches you will be in a real hurricane. He says, sure, but that is at sea level. And sure we all know at different elevations, the air is thinner. Pilots are not equipped to get through this I guess as he has found atpl pilots (me too) give him different answers. I am now thinking he is right, but wrong to use the one inch per thousand feet assumption as the atmosphere is rarely standard and it is really just for altimeter callibrations. Yet this has some strange implications for the barometer on my wall. He has a ton of measuring equipment and I don't know why he doesn't just get a guage for this to. I was hoping for a met-whiz who actually knew what is done to the raw data ("corrected to sea level") Any how thanks for trying. John Denny wrote: On Sep 12, 6:20 pm, The Visitor wrote: Opps, meant to put this in the piloting group. Oh well, same crowd. Sorry. The Visitor wrote: So I have a friend going out to Red Deer Alberta to so some industial air flow measurements of a sort. In his calculations he must enter the atmospheric pressure. I thought, no problem, just get it from the metar for Red Deer. Red Deer is 3000 odd feet asl. If they are reporting 29.92 is the actual pressure some three inches lower? But that is corrected for temperature. Perhaps just use the pressure at the end, I think it is in Hectopascals but is also corrected to Sea Level. What is the actual station pressure he should use? John- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - The volume of replies is stunning... I suspect the gang smells a troll... However I am full of the milk of human kindness this AM... So,here is the answer: Kindly purchase any version of the private pilots exam preparation book or CD, such as that from the Kings, et. al. and all your questions will be answered... denny |
#5
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Sep 13, 9:01 am, The Visitor wrote:
No, not trolling. My friend is convinced that the altimeter setting, which is corrected to sea level (?) would be incorrect to use. Also incorrect would be the Sea Level Pressure listed at the end of a Metar as it is also corrected to sea level. (Surface analysis maps also.) He needs the absolute station pressure not corrected to anything. I told him to use that but he feels he should be taking off three odd inches to come up with the actual pressure. I told him that lapse rate is an average used in an air mass, not at the bottom of an air mass along the ground. valid say if he climbed a 1000 foot tower. But I say anytime you have a station pressure of 26 to 27 inches you will be in a real hurricane. He says, sure, but that is at sea level. And sure we all know at different elevations, the air is thinner. Pilots are not equipped to get through this I guess as he has found atpl pilots (me too) give him different answers. I am now thinking he is right, but wrong to use the one inch per thousand feet assumption as the atmosphere is rarely standard and it is really just for altimeter callibrations. Yet this has some strange implications for the barometer on my wall. He has a ton of measuring equipment and I don't know why he doesn't just get a guage for this to. I was hoping for a met-whiz who actually knew what is done to the raw data ("corrected to sea level") Any how thanks for trying. John Denny wrote: On Sep 12, 6:20 pm, The Visitor wrote: Opps, meant to put this in the piloting group. Oh well, same crowd. Sorry. The Visitor wrote: So I have a friend going out to Red Deer Alberta to so some industial air flow measurements of a sort. In his calculations he must enter the atmospheric pressure. I thought, no problem, just get it from the metar for Red Deer. Red Deer is 3000 odd feet asl. If they are reporting 29.92 is the actual pressure some three inches lower? But that is corrected for temperature. Perhaps just use the pressure at the end, I think it is in Hectopascals but is also corrected to Sea Level. What is the actual station pressure he should use? John- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - The volume of replies is stunning... I suspect the gang smells a troll... However I am full of the milk of human kindness this AM... So,here is the answer: Kindly purchase any version of the private pilots exam preparation book or CD, such as that from the Kings, et. al. and all your questions will be answered... denny You will have to work with the pressures given in a standard atmosphere table that you can get from any engineering text. The altimeter setting only gives the deviation from the standard pressure. It assumes 29.92 inches at the standard pressure. Deviations are proportional (I think). |
#6
|
|||
|
|||
![]() "The Visitor" wrote in message ... No, not trolling. My friend is convinced that the altimeter setting, which is corrected to sea level (?) would be incorrect to use. Also incorrect would be the Sea Level Pressure listed at the end of a Metar as it is also corrected to sea level. (Surface analysis maps also.) He needs the absolute station pressure not corrected to anything. I told him to use that but he feels he should be taking off three odd inches to come up with the actual pressure. I told him that lapse rate is an average used in an air mass, not at the bottom of an air mass along the ground. valid say if he climbed a 1000 foot tower. But I say anytime you have a station pressure of 26 to 27 inches you will be in a real hurricane. He says, sure, but that is at sea level. And sure we all know at different elevations, the air is thinner. Pilots are not equipped to get through this I guess as he has found atpl pilots (me too) give him different answers. I am now thinking he is right, but wrong to use the one inch per thousand feet assumption as the atmosphere is rarely standard and it is really just for altimeter callibrations. Yet this has some strange implications for the barometer on my wall. He has a ton of measuring equipment and I don't know why he doesn't just get a guage for this to. I was hoping for a met-whiz who actually knew what is done to the raw data ("corrected to sea level") Any how thanks for trying. John Denny wrote: On Sep 12, 6:20 pm, The Visitor wrote: Opps, meant to put this in the piloting group. Oh well, same crowd. Sorry. The Visitor wrote: So I have a friend going out to Red Deer Alberta to so some industial air flow measurements of a sort. In his calculations he must enter the atmospheric pressure. I thought, no problem, just get it from the metar for Red Deer. Red Deer is 3000 odd feet asl. If they are reporting 29.92 is the actual pressure some three inches lower? But that is corrected for temperature. Perhaps just use the pressure at the end, I think it is in Hectopascals but is also corrected to Sea Level. What is the actual station pressure he should use? John- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - The volume of replies is stunning... I suspect the gang smells a troll... However I am full of the milk of human kindness this AM... So,here is the answer: Kindly purchase any version of the private pilots exam preparation book or CD, such as that from the Kings, et. al. and all your questions will be answered... denny Walk out to any aircraft with a constant speed prop. Read the Manifold Pressure Gauge without starting the engine. At your altitude, normally around 27". Al G |
#7
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Do those MP gauges ever get calibrated? If not then the readings will
probably not be very accurate. -- Best Regards, Mike http://photoshow.comcast.net/mikenoel A frog in a well does not know the great sea. "Al G" wrote in message ... "The Visitor" wrote in message ... No, not trolling. My friend is convinced that the altimeter setting, which is corrected to sea level (?) would be incorrect to use. Also incorrect would be the Sea Level Pressure listed at the end of a Metar as it is also corrected to sea level. (Surface analysis maps also.) He needs the absolute station pressure not corrected to anything. I told him to use that but he feels he should be taking off three odd inches to come up with the actual pressure. I told him that lapse rate is an average used in an air mass, not at the bottom of an air mass along the ground. valid say if he climbed a 1000 foot tower. But I say anytime you have a station pressure of 26 to 27 inches you will be in a real hurricane. He says, sure, but that is at sea level. And sure we all know at different elevations, the air is thinner. Pilots are not equipped to get through this I guess as he has found atpl pilots (me too) give him different answers. I am now thinking he is right, but wrong to use the one inch per thousand feet assumption as the atmosphere is rarely standard and it is really just for altimeter callibrations. Yet this has some strange implications for the barometer on my wall. He has a ton of measuring equipment and I don't know why he doesn't just get a guage for this to. I was hoping for a met-whiz who actually knew what is done to the raw data ("corrected to sea level") Any how thanks for trying. John Denny wrote: On Sep 12, 6:20 pm, The Visitor wrote: Opps, meant to put this in the piloting group. Oh well, same crowd. Sorry. The Visitor wrote: So I have a friend going out to Red Deer Alberta to so some industial air flow measurements of a sort. In his calculations he must enter the atmospheric pressure. I thought, no problem, just get it from the metar for Red Deer. Red Deer is 3000 odd feet asl. If they are reporting 29.92 is the actual pressure some three inches lower? But that is corrected for temperature. Perhaps just use the pressure at the end, I think it is in Hectopascals but is also corrected to Sea Level. What is the actual station pressure he should use? John- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - The volume of replies is stunning... I suspect the gang smells a troll... However I am full of the milk of human kindness this AM... So,here is the answer: Kindly purchase any version of the private pilots exam preparation book or CD, such as that from the Kings, et. al. and all your questions will be answered... denny Walk out to any aircraft with a constant speed prop. Read the Manifold Pressure Gauge without starting the engine. At your altitude, normally around 27". Al G |
#8
|
|||
|
|||
![]() I'm not there now, but that is very interesting. Man this was tricky. John Al G wrote: Walk out to any aircraft with a constant speed prop. Read the Manifold Pressure Gauge without starting the engine. At your altitude, normally around 27". Al G |
#9
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Sep 12, 4:18 pm, The Visitor wrote:
So I have a friend going out to Red Deer Alberta to so some industial air flow measurements of a sort. In his calculations he must enter the atmospheric pressure. I thought, no problem, just get it from the metar for Red Deer. Red Deer is 3000 odd feet asl. If they are reporting 29.92 is the actual pressure some three inches lower? But that is corrected for temperature. Perhaps just use the pressure at the end, I think it is in Hectopascals but is also corrected to Sea Level. What is the actual station pressure he should use? John Red deer is at 2968'. Your friend could take a good barometer to Vancouver or some other coastal city, calibrate it to a known barometer at a weather office or flight service station there, then take it to Red Deer and read actual barometric pressure. When I moved here to Alberta from BC I had to recalibrate my barometer to correct it to what the sea level pressure would be at this location. Or he could go visit the guys in the FSS at Red Deer; they might be able to give him an actual pressure off their instruments. Their barometers are calibrated to SLP but they might have an actual- pressure instrument there, too. I've been in their tower (at the terminal building) but haven't taken note of what they have. Dan |
Thread Tools | |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
Pressure Washer | Newps | Owning | 11 | April 30th 05 05:50 PM |
Cabin Air Pressure | [email protected] | Piloting | 9 | December 20th 04 03:07 PM |
High Oil Pressure (was: Low oil pressure, high oil temp?) | Thomas Ploch | Owning | 4 | October 5th 04 04:34 AM |
Oil Pressure | Justin H | Home Built | 2 | September 23rd 04 04:35 AM |
Oh, the pressure! | Andrew Gideon | Piloting | 10 | April 20th 04 05:54 PM |