Clark1961
Touchdown! Greaser!
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- Jun 7, 2008
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Nope. Advice remains the same. Stay out of passes and you’ll be just as safe as you are at home without new knowledge requirements. Flying over mountains the same.
I agree with Nick that staying out of passes is a real good idea. One of my methods is to fly over a pass rather than through it as long as the ceiling allows it of course. This method gives maximum terrain clearance at a given altitude for the area and avoids the possible higher winds funneling through the pass. The turbocharger helps the 'kota have the performance to use the method. Lots of folks don't have the performance and get stuck with long shuttle climbs or just accept less terrain clearance. A couple people from POA have ridden with me in the hills and have seen that I take the extra time required to climb for terrain clearance well before the pass.
There is a particular weather phenomena which has nothing to do with passes but is a concern when flying in the general vicinity of mountains: rotors and mountain turbulence. It's a very real problem particularly in the winter when high winds drop down from the upper atmosphere. We've seen hundred mile an hour winds on mountain AWOSs so ya gotta be a little careful with being downwind of peaks. In some conditions you'll see the clouds streaming off the peaks and it's easy to tell that ya don wanna be goin' there. Other times when it is particularly dry the disturbed air won't have telltale clouds. A wise mountain pilot is aware of the direction and velocity of winds aloft and avoids the disturbed air downwind of peaks when velocities exceed 20-25 knots. Sometimes ya get caught in higher winds. One out can be to climb, climb, climb. Another out can be to get really low so the mountains actually block the wind for you. Beware that rotors can have enough energy to hit the ground in some places and there is no wind block.
If you're going to be flying over or around the mountains out west then Sparky's book is a good resource for background material.