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#11
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"Jay Honeck" wrote in
news:nsWHj.45808$TT4.14344@attbi_s22: I will save your post for our future Florida trips. The secret to doing long, multi-day VFR cross country flights is to be relaxed and flexible about your ultimate destination. Remember, we always have three destinations flight-planned, and choose the one with the best long-range weather prognosis on our day of departure. Thus, even though we once again hoped to go to the Hangar Hotel in Texas, for the third spring in a row we scrubbed the idea and headed direct to Florida, thanks to nasty-looking predicted weather in the Texas panhandle. The other "secret" (although it's hardly rare) is to have XM weather. With that incredible tool on board, we know what we're flying toward hours in advance, and can make adjustments accordingly. For example, we left Pensacola (heading South to St. Pete) with conditions marginal VFR and deteriorating. However, with XM weather (and a thorough pre-flight weather briefing), we knew that flying North (away from the gulf, which was pumping the moisture on-shore, causing the lowering visibility/ceiling) would get us quickly into nice VFR, and then (at Tallahassee) we could hang a right and head straight south in good (if incredibly turbulent) VFR. From Tallahassee South, ceilings were 3500 scattered-to-broken, and the view of the gulf was fantastic. I would NEVER have attempted that flight "pre-XM", simply because I'd be trying to paint a picture of weather in my head from a radio briefing (IF you could even get ahold of Flight Service), and you'd have no idea of the "big picture" that live XM paints so wonderfully for you. Good God, where is aviation heading? Bertie |
#12
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On Mar 30, 8:42 pm, "Jay Honeck" wrote:
I would NEVER have attempted that flight "pre-XM", simply because I'd be trying to paint a picture of weather in my head from a radio briefing (IF you could even get ahold of Flight Service), and you'd have no idea of the "big picture" that live XM paints so wonderfully for you. Wait -- are you serious? While in flight weather provides localized details of the changes in weather after the preflight briefing, ANY pilot should have the big and little pictures in his/her head before launching anytime, period. In Flight wx data should simply confirm what you expect to happen, or help educate you on how your interpretation/prognostics were wrong. XM doesn't provide the depth of information available he http://aviationweather.gov/ And if you're relying on XM in lieu of a Standard wx brief, you're in violation of the CFRs. Dan Mc |
#13
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I would NEVER have attempted that flight "pre-XM", simply because I'd be
trying to paint a picture of weather in my head from a radio briefing (IF you could even get ahold of Flight Service), and you'd have no idea of the "big picture" that live XM paints so wonderfully for you. Wait -- are you serious? Completely. XM weather gives you a weather picture that is absolutely unparalleled in GA aircraft. Before we had it, we would have stayed in Pensacola. After we had it, the flight from Pensacola to St. Pete was completely routine. XM doesn't provide the depth of information available he http://aviationweather.gov/ No one said it did. But it provides more than enough in-flight information to make flying MUCH safer and more relaxing. In my time, three things have utterly changed flying for the better: 1. GPS 2. ANR technology 3. XM weather And if you're relying on XM in lieu of a Standard wx brief, you're in violation of the CFRs. As stated in my post, we obtained a standard weather briefing, as we do before any flight. -- Jay Honeck Iowa City, IA Pathfinder N56993 www.AlexisParkInn.com "Your Aviation Destination" |
#14
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On Mar 30, 9:51 pm, "Jay Honeck" wrote:
XM weather gives you a weather picture that is absolutely unparalleled in GA aircraft. Yes, but... You -- as a pilot -- should have that "picture" in your mind, and be able to predict the changes, rates of changes, and the impact of those changes on your flight. XM will help you adjust that picture, and should help you acquire that skill more rapidly IF you take the approach that YOU have to know, and not rely on the XM. The XM -- as GPS -- should simply confirm what you already know. Curmudgeon lament follows: I guess it's here -- a whole generation of pilots following magenta lines who will now be looking to fly through green and avoid the red and yellow. We should call them Crayola-viators. Dan Mc |
#15
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"Jay Honeck" wrote in
news:WsXHj.45877$TT4.30055@attbi_s22: I would NEVER have attempted that flight "pre-XM", simply because I'd be trying to paint a picture of weather in my head from a radio briefing (IF you could even get ahold of Flight Service), and you'd have no idea of the "big picture" that live XM paints so wonderfully for you. Wait -- are you serious? Completely. XM weather gives y Thanks be to God it will only be a Cherokee you destroy. Bertie |
#16
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#18
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I guess it's here -- a whole generation of pilots following magenta
lines who will now be looking to fly through green and avoid the red and yellow. We should call them Crayola-viators. That's funny. I just flew my family transcontinentally 2500 miles in a single-piston-engine spam-can, all VFR, over a six day period, during the most weather-variable time of year, using the best technology available -- and you're saying that using this technology makes me a "crayola-viator"? You're not a curmudgeon -- you're a Luddite. -- Jay Honeck Iowa City, IA Pathfinder N56993 www.AlexisParkInn.com "Your Aviation Destination" |
#19
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"Maxwell" luv^2^fly^99@^cox.^net wrote in news:faYHj.45315$f8.11862
@newsfe23.lga: "Bertie the Bunyip" wrote in message .. . Dan wrote in news:1777fa59-5a2d-4171-af7f- : On Mar 30, 9:51 pm, "Jay Honeck" wrote: XM weather gives you a weather picture that is absolutely unparalleled in GA aircraft. Yes, but... You -- as a pilot -- should have that "picture" in your mind, and be able to predict the changes, rates of changes, and the impact of those changes on your flight. XM will help you adjust that picture, and should help you acquire that skill more rapidly IF you take the approach that YOU have to know, and not rely on the XM. The XM -- as GPS -- should simply confirm what you already know. Curmudgeon lament follows: I guess it's here -- a whole generation of pilots following magenta lines who will now be looking to fly through green and avoid the red and yellow. We should call them Crayola-viators. I fly with lots of them nowadays. i have a differnt name for them. We have a name for lamers like guys too - dinosaurs. So, you admit to being one of the lusers who cant fly without electronic crutches? good for you. Relaising this is the first step towards realising you'll soon be a statistic. BTW, When I was a young pilot, I didn't see any of the previous generation as dinosaurs. Bertie |
#20
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"Jay Honeck" wrote in
news:QaYHj.45927$TT4.12175@attbi_s22: I guess it's here -- a whole generation of pilots following magenta lines who will now be looking to fly through green and avoid the red and yellow. We should call them Crayola-viators. That's funny. I just flew my family transcontinentally 2500 miles in a single-piston-engine spam-can, all VFR, over a six day period, during the most weather-variable time of year, using the best technology available -- and you're saying that using this technology makes me a "crayola-viator"? You're not a curmudgeon -- you're a Luddite. No, he's an aviator, and you are an idiot. Bertie |
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