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#1
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Nexrad versus on-board radar
Flying back from Atlanta to Jackson, my Echo Flight finally received its
downloaded Nexrad data. It showed me flying right in the middle of a big blotch of red. I look outside the window. I'm in light 40 F light drizzle with ceilings of about 6000 above a broken 2000 layer. I turn on the Bendix/King RDR 2000 on-board radar. It shows nothing. Nothing on the stormscope. Why the huge contrast between the on-board and the Nexrad return? Perhaps the Nexrad was picking up water far above me, while the on-board was looking ahead (I was at 5,000.) |
#2
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"Wyatt Emmerich" wrote in message ... Flying back from Atlanta to Jackson, my Echo Flight finally received its downloaded Nexrad data. It showed me flying right in the middle of a big blotch of red. I look outside the window. I'm in light 40 F light drizzle with ceilings of about 6000 above a broken 2000 layer. I turn on the Bendix/King RDR 2000 on-board radar. It shows nothing. Nothing on the stormscope. Why the huge contrast between the on-board and the Nexrad return? Perhaps the Nexrad was picking up water far above me, while the on-board was looking ahead (I was at 5,000.) Isn't Nexrad satellite based? In that case, you would be seeing the moisture _above_. |
#3
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"Tom Sixkiller" wrote:
Isn't Nexrad satellite based? No. It's radar based. In that case, you would be seeing the moisture _above_. NexRad sees precipitation returns. -- Dan C172RG at BFM |
#4
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"Dan Luke" wrote in message ... "Tom Sixkiller" wrote: Isn't Nexrad satellite based? No. It's radar based. Doesn't it have satellite overlays? In that case, you would be seeing the moisture _above_. NexRad sees precipitation returns. So...why is he getting the returns he is? |
#5
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"Wyatt Emmerich" wrote:
Why the huge contrast between the on-board and the Nexrad return? Perhaps the Nexrad was picking up water far above me, while the on-board was looking ahead (I was at 5,000.) Perhaps, but I have seen persistant false weather depictions on my WxWorks NEXRAD display a couple of times. -- Dan C172RG at BFM |
#6
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In article , Tom Sixkiller
wrote: Isn't Nexrad satellite based? In that case, you would be seeing the moisture _above_. NexRad is the current ground based system. What he is referring to is an uplink of the images. |
#7
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"Tom Sixkiller" wrote:
No. It's radar based. Doesn't it have satellite overlays? What's are those? In that case, you would be seeing the moisture _above_. NexRad sees precipitation returns. So...why is he getting the returns he is? He's seeing false returns or artifacts of the process that creates the NEXRAD composite or some fault in the system he's using to receive NEXRAD. Also, I suppose it's possible that NEXRAD was showing some very high altitude virga that his on-board radar was pitched too low to see. -- Dan C172RG at BFM |
#8
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I've never used in-aircraft Nexrad. But the Nexrad images displayed on the
web by the National Weather Service has two modes, Precipitation and Clear Air. When there isn't significant precip they use Clear Air mode that is much more sensitive and will displays colors without any precip. Don't know if that applies to the in-aircraft version. "Wyatt Emmerich" wrote in message ... Flying back from Atlanta to Jackson, my Echo Flight finally received its downloaded Nexrad data. It showed me flying right in the middle of a big blotch of red. I look outside the window. I'm in light 40 F light drizzle with ceilings of about 6000 above a broken 2000 layer. I turn on the Bendix/King RDR 2000 on-board radar. It shows nothing. Nothing on the stormscope. Why the huge contrast between the on-board and the Nexrad return? Perhaps the Nexrad was picking up water far above me, while the on-board was looking ahead (I was at 5,000.) |
#9
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Most likely the answer. Check the DBZ scale, if it starts with negative
numbers the radar is in clear air mode. In precip mode it starts at 5 dbz. "Mick Ruthven" wrote in message ... I've never used in-aircraft Nexrad. But the Nexrad images displayed on the web by the National Weather Service has two modes, Precipitation and Clear Air. When there isn't significant precip they use Clear Air mode that is much more sensitive and will displays colors without any precip. Don't know if that applies to the in-aircraft version. |
#10
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"Saryon" wrote:
Perhaps, but I have seen persistant false weather depictions on my WxWorks NEXRAD display a couple of times. Is it possible that it's something like doppler where they have a sensativity setting, and when it's not raining all that hard they crank up the sensativity which creates returns for moisture that's really, really fine? In the case I described, there was no precipitation at all. -- Dan C172RG at BFM |
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