Dave S.
Pre-takeoff checklist
- Joined
- Feb 28, 2017
- Messages
- 228
- Display Name
Display name:
thetexan
“ If you read it it’s true, if you hear it it’s magnetic”. Remember that? Add the different sources to the mix and no wonder students get mixed up.
ASOS is usually configured to true. The ASOS usually gets transmitted to the system directly and the METAR (you read a METAR) reflects the true wind. When a controller makes an ATIS he usually reads the weather off the ASOS screen. This results in...Uh oh!...true wind on the ATIS which you hear thus violating the rule of thumb.
But wait the FAA had a clever solution years ago and is still in place today. When the controller gets to the wind when making the ATIS from the ASOS screen, the direction from the ATO is to use the direct wind indicators such as the SAWS (either the 10 or 120 second reading) or wind instruments either of which are magnetic. So the ATIS has some info from the ASOS and some from the direct wind instruments.
So you can rely on that rule to ensure that what you hear on the ATIS is truly magnetic, or magnetically true as it were.
The question becomes did the controller follow that directive or did he just read it off the ASOS screen.
My new philosophy is that a hundred years from now none of this will matter.
tex
ASOS is usually configured to true. The ASOS usually gets transmitted to the system directly and the METAR (you read a METAR) reflects the true wind. When a controller makes an ATIS he usually reads the weather off the ASOS screen. This results in...Uh oh!...true wind on the ATIS which you hear thus violating the rule of thumb.
But wait the FAA had a clever solution years ago and is still in place today. When the controller gets to the wind when making the ATIS from the ASOS screen, the direction from the ATO is to use the direct wind indicators such as the SAWS (either the 10 or 120 second reading) or wind instruments either of which are magnetic. So the ATIS has some info from the ASOS and some from the direct wind instruments.
So you can rely on that rule to ensure that what you hear on the ATIS is truly magnetic, or magnetically true as it were.
The question becomes did the controller follow that directive or did he just read it off the ASOS screen.
My new philosophy is that a hundred years from now none of this will matter.
tex
Last edited: