Nexrad data, no matter where you get it from, will always be at least 6 minutes behind. That's how long it takes the radar to make a complete update (multiple sweeps at multiple levels). So six minutes plus whatever the lag time is from XM or ADS-B (don't know, but curious).
A strike finder is literally live. But also only shows lightning. A storm cell without lightning is just as dangerous. If it was free, sure. If was $$, probably not worth it with all the other resources available.
That said, I would never be close enough to a storm cell for either to make a difference in a decision.
Perhaps independent, real time information.
Sferics devices, which detect lighting, are an excellent adjunct to radar, which detects precipitation. Having both forms of information really makes a difference in evaluating what you're looking at. That's one reason on my Garmin 510 I chose the mid-level Aviator XM weather, which includes both sferics and radar plots, rather than cheaper Aviator LT, which has only radar.
I'm sorry, but I don't understand what you are saying in this last sentence. First, what is a Garmin 510. Do you mean that you have an XM receiver and a separate Spherics receiving device that displays on a "Garmin 510," and that the more expensive mid-level Aviator XM service allows input from the XM receiver and a Spherics device to be displayed simultaneously?
Datalink for strategy, 'spherics for tactics.
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Absolutely worth the investment. When it comes to dealing with convective activity, the hard and fast rule is that you've got to be able to see them and avoid them. If you can't see them with your eyeballs you've got to have the equipment to "see" them electronically. You can't avoid what you can't see. It's really that simple.I have a line on either an Insight SF2000 or an L3 wx900 of my choosing. However, are they really worth Installing in this day and age? With FIS B, Foreflight and XM weather available, what's the point?
Handheld GPS with XM weather receiver. Displays weather overlaid on the moving map.I'm sorry, but I don't understand what you are saying in this last sentence. First, what is a Garmin 510.
No. The XM weather system gathers sferics information just like it gathers NEXRAD radar data and bounces it off the satellite to my 510, which displays it on a map. Having the radar and sferics data overlaid on a single map makes it much easier to comprehend and analyze. You could do the same in a plane with on-board radar and on-board sferics with any several MFD's on the market, or also with up/down-linked NEXRAD radar data and on-board sferics also feeding an MFD.Do you mean that you have an XM receiver and a separate Spherics receiving device that displays on a "Garmin 510," and that the more expensive mid-level Aviator XM service allows input from the XM receiver and a Spherics device to be displayed simultaneously?
Handheld GPS with XM weather receiver. Displays weather overlaid on the moving map.
https://buy.garmin.com/en-US/US/in-the-air/portable-gps/aera-510/prod37813.html
No. The XM weather system gathers sferics information just like it gathers NEXRAD radar data and bounces it off the satellite to my 510, which displays it on a map. Having the radar and sferics data overlaid on a single map makes it much easier to comprehend and analyze. You could do the same in a plane with on-board radar and on-board sferics with any several MFD's on the market, or also with up/down-linked NEXRAD radar data and on-board sferics also feeding an MFD.
And yes, the XM data has time lags, so make darn sure you aren't cutting close to it in the direction it's moving (and the Garmin has an "animate" mode which allows you to see the movement) or between cells that may be merging or next to cells which may be growing.
Absolutely worth the investment.
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When it comes to dealing with close-in convective weather, I essentially use spherics detectors to decide what to circumnavigate and the onboard weather radar to do the circumnavigation. Why, because spherics detectors lack the necessary close-in resolution to do it comfortably.
At the same time, the absence of sferics indications is not by itself sufficient to conclude that it's safe to punch through a given built-up cumulus cloud.I don't have on board radar, but I love my WX500 stormscope. While my experience is limited to only 5 years, and after learning some of its nuances, it has helped avoid several thunderstorm encounters and enabled me to get through when things began to suddenly start popping.
At the same time, the absence of sferics indications is not by itself sufficient to conclude that it's safe to punch through a given built-up cumulus cloud.
I was headed south down V1 one night some years back in my Cheetah, with no radar or sferics (XM hadn't been invented yet, and I didn't have a stormscope in that plane). I was up at about 9000 to stay above the lower later, but there was an east-west line of built-up cumulus down south of Norfolk VA. ATC was seeing moderate precip on their radar, and I just didn't like the look of them in the moonlight, so I chose to go east about 30 miles out of my way to go around the end of the line -- nice, smooth ride all the way around and then rejoining V1 near the NC/SC line.
OTOH, the Baron behind me at 11,000 was offered the same routing, but said "I'm not seeing anything on my stormscope, so I'll just continue through it down V1." When he popped out the other side of the clouds, he told the controller that's the worst he'd ever been beat up by turbulence.
So, I'll stick with obtaining and integrating all the data I can get (including radar and sfercs, as well as the "storm cell" indications and echo tops data you can get on XM) rather than relying on any one indicator -- even radar.
I do -- more times than I can count, both in clouds and out. While it's hard to imagine lightning discharge without significant turbulence, its not at all hard to imagine significant turbulence without lightning discharge.I concur completely with your summary statements as one should not be relying on isolated information to penetrate areas of thunderstorms when other information is available, not excluding your eyeballs. While I do not recall experiencing areas of significant turbulence in the absence of discharge data in my airplane,
I have no doubt the Baron's stormscope was functioning properly, but it's only an electrical discharge detector, not a turbulence detector, and you can get severe or even extreme turbulence without electrical discharge.one could get a new discharge right where you happen to be, as in my experience above while on final to ARB. I would like to hear from others with personal experience in aircraft where the surface mapping has been done properly and the sherics device was working in an otherwise normal manner, as the breadth of my own experience is limited. Your anecdote about the Baron would seem to indicate they thought their stormscope was functioning.
I do -- more times than I can count, both in clouds and out. While it's hard to imagine lightning discharge without significant turbulence, its not at all hard to imagine significant turbulence without lightning discharge.
I have no doubt the Baron's stormscope was functioning properly, but it's only an electrical discharge detector, not a turbulence detector, and you can get severe or even extreme turbulence without electrical discharge.
You can get significant turbulence in towering cumulus before the lightning starts. Don't think for an instant that you can safely or smoothly fly into a towering cumulus cloud just because there is no lightning activity. In that regard the stormscope is not "fallible", since it is, as I said before, only a lightning detector, not a turbulence detector, so failure to detect turbulence not associated with lightning would not be considered a fallibility of that unit.Of course you are right. I don't bother to turn the stormscope display on without visible moisture and forecast thunderstorms or cumulus clouds even though there may be plenty of turbulence at times. I am talking about my experiences when conditions were right for thunderstorm formation. But, I am happy to defer to you and others with greater experience and to learn about those situations where a stormscope is fallible. But if a stormscope would not display discharges with an active or incipient thunderstorm close by, as with your Baron example, I would like to know that.
All of the stormscopes I've used seem to be pretty good with directional indications but pretty poor on estimating range. (Ie if the discharge is stronger, it will appear on the screen "closer" to the aircraft). Is this common?
I've been using the wx radar/Stormscope combination for nearly 30 years and close to 12,000 hours and I've NEVER been snookered by it. The later units do a MUCH better job with the radial spread as compared to the earlier units. After thousands of hours of direct comparisons between what the stormscope was was showing and what the radar was showing I finally stopped worrying about the differences, they were always too small to be an issue at any range.All of the stormscopes I've used seem to be pretty good with directional indications but pretty poor on estimating range. (Ie if the discharge is stronger, it will appear on the screen "closer" to the aircraft). Is this common?
This has been my experience as well.Based on many years of owning and flying a Stormscope, and lots of reading (e.g. here), my understanding and experience is that it detects not only the visible "lightning bolts" that we associate with a developed thunderstorm, but also smaller static discharges, typically invisible to the naked eye, which are associated with turbulence due to strong shearing action between adjacent air layers. Therefore, by steering away from all displayed dots (i.e. discharges), you are pretty much guaranteed a turbulence-free ride. That has been my experience, as I noted in my post above, so either I have been incredibly lucky, or there is some substance to the theory. As I posted above, I no longer have to rely on the Stormscope alone, since I now also have NextGen via ADS-B, so the combination is even more powerful. Of course, when VMC, experienced eyeballs can do a pretty good job too, esp. in conjunction with the electronic tools.