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Anybody have a rule of thumb that helps break wind speed/dir into its crosswind
headwind components? Bart |
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"Bart" wrote in message
... Anybody have a rule of thumb that helps break wind speed/dir into its crosswind headwind components? Here are a few... the first two are most important, but put all four together and it is all you need. (1) A 45 degree wind will have crosswind and headwind components of roughly 70 percent. (2) 30 degrees (off the nose)- the crosswind is 50% and the headwind you can round up to 90%. (3) For less than 30 degrees, the crosswind component versus the angle is close to linear. In other words, for 15 degrees, 25% is close, 10 degrees, about 15-20%. Also, the headwind component is almost equal to the total wind in this range, you might as well round it off. You can fudge the number by subtracting 1 or 2 knots from your headwind if it makes you feel better ![]() Here is an example: Runway 14, wind 180 at 20 knots. The angle is 180-140=40 degrees. Pretty close to 45... so use 75% and approximate the crosswind to 14 knots and the headwind to 14 knots. Using a calculator I get 13 and 15- not bad! Another example: Runway 09, wind 070 at 15 knots. I get 20 degrees for the angle, that is less than 30 degrees, in fact, it is 2/3 of 30, so instead of 50% I will use 2/3 of 50%. So, crosswind? 50% of 15 knots is 8, and 2/3 of that is 6. Headwind? The angle is so narrow let's say 15 knots. The calculator says 5 knots crosswind and 14 knots headwind. If I had fudged the headwind down by 1 knot then I would have been right on. And the last rule, which is really just the second and third ones over again- (4) For greater 60 degrees and greater than 60 degrees, just switch the crosswind and headwind rules with each other for the 30 and less than 30 rules. (5) Wait- a bonus rule, useful "on the fly" on cross country to get a crab angle. 6 degrees equals 10 percent. So if you have a 10 knot crosswind and you're going 100 knots, crab 6 degrees towards the crosswind. This will give you a good starting point to correct your ground track from. Hope this helps |
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Hey Thanks!
Bart "Jim Carriere" wrote in message ... "Bart" wrote in message ... Anybody have a rule of thumb that helps break wind speed/dir into its crosswind headwind components? Here are a few... the first two are most important, but put all four together and it is all you need. (1) A 45 degree wind will have crosswind and headwind components of roughly 70 percent. (2) 30 degrees (off the nose)- the crosswind is 50% and the headwind you can round up to 90%. (3) For less than 30 degrees, the crosswind component versus the angle is close to linear. In other words, for 15 degrees, 25% is close, 10 degrees, about 15-20%. Also, the headwind component is almost equal to the total wind in this range, you might as well round it off. You can fudge the number by subtracting 1 or 2 knots from your headwind if it makes you feel better ![]() Here is an example: Runway 14, wind 180 at 20 knots. The angle is 180-140=40 degrees. Pretty close to 45... so use 75% and approximate the crosswind to 14 knots and the headwind to 14 knots. Using a calculator I get 13 and 15- not bad! Another example: Runway 09, wind 070 at 15 knots. I get 20 degrees for the angle, that is less than 30 degrees, in fact, it is 2/3 of 30, so instead of 50% I will use 2/3 of 50%. So, crosswind? 50% of 15 knots is 8, and 2/3 of that is 6. Headwind? The angle is so narrow let's say 15 knots. The calculator says 5 knots crosswind and 14 knots headwind. If I had fudged the headwind down by 1 knot then I would have been right on. And the last rule, which is really just the second and third ones over again- (4) For greater 60 degrees and greater than 60 degrees, just switch the crosswind and headwind rules with each other for the 30 and less than 30 rules. (5) Wait- a bonus rule, useful "on the fly" on cross country to get a crab angle. 6 degrees equals 10 percent. So if you have a 10 knot crosswind and you're going 100 knots, crab 6 degrees towards the crosswind. This will give you a good starting point to correct your ground track from. Hope this helps |
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Yeh, Thanks !!
Bart wrote: Hey Thanks! Bart "Jim Carriere" wrote in message ... "Bart" wrote in message ... Anybody have a rule of thumb that helps break wind speed/dir into its crosswind headwind components? Here are a few... the first two are most important, but put all four together and it is all you need. (1) A 45 degree wind will have crosswind and headwind components of roughly 70 percent. (2) 30 degrees (off the nose)- the crosswind is 50% and the headwind you can round up to 90%. (3) For less than 30 degrees, the crosswind component versus the angle is close to linear. In other words, for 15 degrees, 25% is close, 10 degrees, about 15-20%. Also, the headwind component is almost equal to the total wind in this range, you might as well round it off. You can fudge the number by subtracting 1 or 2 knots from your headwind if it makes you feel better ![]() Here is an example: Runway 14, wind 180 at 20 knots. The angle is 180-140=40 degrees. Pretty close to 45... so use 75% and approximate the crosswind to 14 knots and the headwind to 14 knots. Using a calculator I get 13 and 15- not bad! Another example: Runway 09, wind 070 at 15 knots. I get 20 degrees for the angle, that is less than 30 degrees, in fact, it is 2/3 of 30, so instead of 50% I will use 2/3 of 50%. So, crosswind? 50% of 15 knots is 8, and 2/3 of that is 6. Headwind? The angle is so narrow let's say 15 knots. The calculator says 5 knots crosswind and 14 knots headwind. If I had fudged the headwind down by 1 knot then I would have been right on. And the last rule, which is really just the second and third ones over again- (4) For greater 60 degrees and greater than 60 degrees, just switch the crosswind and headwind rules with each other for the 30 and less than 30 rules. (5) Wait- a bonus rule, useful "on the fly" on cross country to get a crab angle. 6 degrees equals 10 percent. So if you have a 10 knot crosswind and you're going 100 knots, crab 6 degrees towards the crosswind. This will give you a good starting point to correct your ground track from. Hope this helps |
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