![]() |
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
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Sunday, November 3. How were the Allegheny ridges working yesterday from Eagle Field, PA to Covington, VA. Any over-development or snow showers?
|
#2
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Wondered that yesterday morning, thought 500k?
Leaving Philadelphia the flight path went over the Blairstown 300k O/R turnpoint at Pillow microwave tower. There was a cu at the end of Mahantango south of the river, positioned well for the upwind jog to Tuscarora. OLC scores look better than I thought. Jim |
#3
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Just past Covington, my friend JP Stewart (18 years old) pulled off a Diamond Distance yesterday!
http://www.onlinecontest.org/olc-2.0...=46118&sp=2014 Daniel |
#4
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Monday, November 4, 2013 11:47:34 AM UTC-5, wrote:
Sunday, November 3. How were the Allegheny ridges working yesterday from Eagle Field, PA to Covington, VA. Any over-development or snow showers? I issued a record watch a few days before Sunday, only to have to start dialing it back as each successive model run began to indicate more problems. To summarize. Winds were weaker and more NNW to N than ideal for the majority of the ridge system. Also, there was much more trailing moisture around until about late morning than originally forecast; bases started low and convection was weaker until that cleared. Blairstown folks were able to get out early, as NNW is ideal for the local ridges. I also saw flights from M-ASA, Eagle Field, etc, that all used parts of the ridge system in the Blairstown/Mifflin/M-ASA task areas (i.e. Mahantango Mountain, Tuscarora Mountain, Tussey, Nittany, Bald Eagle, etc.) Oh, and the great flight JP Stewart made from BRSS. All pireps featured words like "tricky", "soft", "squirelly", "tough" etc. Having said that 600K or better in November isn't too shabby. See: http://www.onlinecontest.org/olc-2.0...=olc&c=US&sc=2 |
#5
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Monday, November 4, 2013 7:14:27 PM UTC-5, Papa3 wrote:
On Monday, November 4, 2013 11:47:34 AM UTC-5, wrote: Sunday, November 3. How were the Allegheny ridges working yesterday from Eagle Field, PA to Covington, VA. Any over-development or snow showers? In the not-quite-useful response category: On Sunday in Front Royal VA, the Massanutten was not working, except for the very northern tip, which was just barely perpendicular to the very northerly winds. My SN-10 reported with high confidence that the winds were 000 at 18 when I launched at 10:30ish. The winds got more westerly as the day went on, and I eventually contacted weak wave up above 10,000 feet. None of the private ships assembled at KFRR except for me, so I had the wave to myself. The wave I contacted was generated by the Alleghenies. Although I was significantly west of the main ridge, I did get high enough to see all the way to Petersburg, and didn't see any precipitation, just blue and an occasional roll cloud. |
#6
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On 11/4/2013 5:14 PM, Papa3 wrote:
On Monday, November 4, 2013 11:47:34 AM UTC-5, wrote: Sunday, November 3. How were the Allegheny ridges working yesterday from Eagle Field, PA to Covington, VA. Any over-development or snow showers? I issued a record watch a few days before Sunday, only to have to start dialing it back as each successive model run began to indicate more problems. Snip... Continuing the thread drift... FWIW, if I had to be limited to one single "high tech" piece of data to help me forecast soaring weather, it would be the following link. http://www.weather.gov/satellite?image=ir&hours=24 It usta be even better when you could set the time-lapse speed and run the loop continuously, insteada the manually-controlled, one-speed-for-all present version; mindless repetition can be good! About the only thing the satellite loop doesn't help me do a better job of forecasting than the weather professionals (of the NWS), is detecting (vertically) thin cold fronts that somewhat occasionally (in the front range of Colorado region) lack clouds or moisture sufficient to show up on the composite loop. Primarily a winter phenomenon, these puppies can - not directly influenced by the jet - slide in at an angle to the jet if one relies exclusively on satellite views. (Of course, they show up really well from upstream surface temps, which I'm too lazy to monitor...) Five minutes (or less, once you've got yourself dialed in) each morning is all that's needed to get really good at 24-hour (and - depending on jet stream configuration & location - sometimes several days out) forecasts quite useful for soaring (not merely picnics!). Been using it for years... YMMV, depending on geographic location, personal diligence honing your predictive abilities based on the loop, etc. By way of tying "my personal theory" to reality - since we're talking of winter, cold fronts and the NWS - they seriously blew the "major weather event" prediction overnight here by still calling for from 2-5 inches of snow when last checked before hitting the rack...when clearly the jet indicated no such thing. As I type, the sky's clearing, and the skiff of snow is long gone. BTW, in the Unintended Consequences Department, it was the long-gone PBS program "AM Weather" out of - IIRC - Ballamer (most of the country knows it as "Baltimore"), MD, that clued me in to the (no pun intended) overriding influence of the jet on surface weather. Remember their short, repetitive satellite loop segment? In the pre-soaring-forecast days, it was all Joe Schmoes like me had easily available for predictive purposes. Over time it dawned on me inferences based on the jet's location and pattern of motion over the surface were MUCH better indicators of future weather than were NWS forecasts...at least in this area. The disconnect between reality and weather models for this area remains true today, though to a lesser extent. In particular, the NWS has gotten considerably better at predicting wind storm events for this area, but - as typified by last evening's forecast - are still pretty weak at predicting "major weather events" and precip amounts... Bob W. |
#7
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
For my money, the following is the best satellite source for short-term now casting:
On Tuesday, November 5, 2013 12:44:19 PM UTC-5, Bob Whelan wrote: On 11/4/2013 5:14 PM, Papa3 wrote: Continuing the thread drift... FWIW, if I had to be limited to one single "high tech" piece of data to help me forecast soaring weather, it would be the following link. http://www.weather.gov/satellite?image=ir&hours=24 It usta be even better when you could set the time-lapse speed and run the loop continuously, insteada the manually-controlled, one-speed-for-all present version; mindless repetition can be good! |
#8
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
For my money, this is the most useful short term/nowcasting satellite tool. You can zoom in on a region, overlay county lines, change the resolution, and look at up to a half-day's worth of history. Super useful for visualizing streeting and wave in the Appalachians...
http://wwwghcc.msfc.nasa.gov/GOES/goeseastconus.html On Tuesday, November 5, 2013 12:44:19 PM UTC-5, Bob Whelan wrote: On 11/4/2013 5:14 PM, Papa3 wrote: On Monday, November 4, 2013 11:47:34 AM UTC-5, wrote: Sunday, November 3. How were the Allegheny ridges working yesterday from Eagle Field, PA to Covington, VA. Any over-development or snow showers? I issued a record watch a few days before Sunday, only to have to start dialing it back as each successive model run began to indicate more problems. Snip... Continuing the thread drift... FWIW, if I had to be limited to one single "high tech" piece of data to help me forecast soaring weather, it would be the following link. http://www.weather.gov/satellite?image=ir&hours=24 It usta be even better when you could set the time-lapse speed and run the loop continuously, insteada the manually-controlled, one-speed-for-all present version; mindless repetition can be good! |
#9
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Hello Papa3. How does one "subscribe" to your ridge weather watch?
On Monday, November 4, 2013 7:14:27 PM UTC-5, Papa3 wrote: On Monday, November 4, 2013 11:47:34 AM UTC-5, wrote: Sunday, November 3. How were the Allegheny ridges working yesterday from Eagle Field, PA to Covington, VA. Any over-development or snow showers? I issued a record watch a few days before Sunday, only to have to start dialing it back as each successive model run began to indicate more problems. |
#10
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Wednesday, November 6, 2013 10:43:11 AM UTC-5, wrote:
Hello Papa3. How does one "subscribe" to your ridge weather watch? Me too. How? |
|
Thread Tools | |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
Not Working | Mike McCarron[_2_] | Soaring | 1 | December 22nd 12 11:38 PM |
Not Working | Mike McCarron[_2_] | Soaring | 4 | December 22nd 12 11:19 PM |
Not Working | Mike McCarron[_2_] | Soaring | 1 | December 22nd 12 01:40 PM |
Working on it... | Bob (not my real pseudonym) | Aviation Photos | 0 | February 6th 10 08:48 AM |
A fine ridge day in PA - the Ridge Soaring Irregulars ride again | QT | Soaring | 0 | April 6th 06 04:01 PM |