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[sorry, reposting under a different subject line, since some idiot
hijacked and crossposted the original thread] http://www.avweb.com/eletter/archive...ll.html#196146 "An air traffic controller didn’t tell Scott Crossfield he was headed for a storm, but then Crossfield didn’t ask, either." The avweb article links to this Washington Post story: http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn...091501434.html I think I read in the NTSB preliminary report that Scott had an XM weather subscription. Since I'm a user of the XM product, I'd be interested in knowing whether he was displaying the NEXRAD in the cockpit, and what it showed. DGB |
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On 9/17/2007 10:54:11 AM, Dave Butler wrote:
Since I'm a user of the XM product, I'd be interested in knowing whether he was displaying the NEXRAD in the cockpit, and what it showed. As a user of WSI's in-cockpit weather, I am under the impression that XM NEXRAD can be up to 10 to 15 minutes old, depending on refresh rate and time it takes to assemble the NEXRAD mosaic and transmitted up to XM's satellites. If that potential for stale radar data is indeed true, then using XM (and WSI) to weave one's way around intense thunderstorms is false security. -- Peter |
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Peter R. wrote:
On 9/17/2007 10:54:11 AM, Dave Butler wrote: Since I'm a user of the XM product, I'd be interested in knowing whether he was displaying the NEXRAD in the cockpit, and what it showed. As a user of WSI's in-cockpit weather, I am under the impression that XM NEXRAD can be up to 10 to 15 minutes old, depending on refresh rate and time NEXRAD through XM Radio is usually never more than ten minutes old. It's impractical to use for tactical avoidance (like you would use airborn radar or sferics) but you can steer clear of large spots of orange to red. |
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Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
Scott Crossfield | Dave Butler | Instrument Flight Rules | 6 | September 17th 07 06:54 PM |
Scott Crossfield | Bryan | Soaring | 17 | April 28th 06 02:53 AM |
Hats off to you, Scott | Scott | Home Built | 0 | April 21st 06 02:00 PM |
Warm Weather Pilots, Cold Weather Ops | john smith | Piloting | 3 | December 2nd 04 04:00 PM |
And they say the automated Weather Station problems "ASOS" are insignificant because only light aircraft need Weather Observations and forecasts... | Roy | Piloting | 4 | July 12th 03 04:03 PM |