AggieMike88
Touchdown! Greaser!
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The original "I don't know it all" of aviation.
From a blog post created by Scott Dennstaedt, ForeFlight's Aviation Weather Scientist and all around nice guy,
For the remainder of the story, visit the blog post: https://blog.foreflight.com/2017/03/16/graphical-forecasts-for-aviation-gfa-operational-in-april/
To view the new product, visit http://www.aviationweather.gov/gfa. I've been playing with it for a bit and it is a very nice addition to available weather products.
Graphical Forecasts for Aviation (GFA) will become operational in April (link)
Effective April 13, 2017, the experimental Graphical Forecasts for Aviation (GFA) produced by the NWS Aviation Weather Center (AWC) will transition to operational status. As you may have heard, the GFA was created in response to a formal request by the FAA to discontinue production of the textual Area Forecasts (FA). According to the NWS headquarters in Silver Spring, Maryland, "the requirements for the underlying meteorological information in the FA have not changed. The FAA recognizes that, given modern advances within the NWS, the legacy text FA is no longer the best source of en route flight planning weather information."
The new graphical forecasts are designed to provide meteorological information equivalent to the textual FA. The GFA product includes observations and forecasts for the continental United States that provide data critical for aviation safety. The data is overlaid on high-resolution base maps that you can test drive here. This means that all of the forecasts will terminate at the U.S. border. FAs for Hawaii, Alaska, the Caribbean, and the Gulf of Mexico will not be affected at this time.
For the time being, the legacy FA will continue to be generated in parallel with the GFA. The GFA is automated whereas the legacy FA is issued by forecasters at the AWC. At some point in the future, forecasters at the AWC will discontinue issuing this textual forecast. And don't be surprised if the two forecasts contradict one another – let's look at an example:
The new graphical forecasts are designed to provide meteorological information equivalent to the textual FA. The GFA product includes observations and forecasts for the continental United States that provide data critical for aviation safety. The data is overlaid on high-resolution base maps that you can test drive here. This means that all of the forecasts will terminate at the U.S. border. FAs for Hawaii, Alaska, the Caribbean, and the Gulf of Mexico will not be affected at this time.
For the time being, the legacy FA will continue to be generated in parallel with the GFA. The GFA is automated whereas the legacy FA is issued by forecasters at the AWC. At some point in the future, forecasters at the AWC will discontinue issuing this textual forecast. And don't be surprised if the two forecasts contradict one another – let's look at an example:
For the remainder of the story, visit the blog post: https://blog.foreflight.com/2017/03/16/graphical-forecasts-for-aviation-gfa-operational-in-april/
To view the new product, visit http://www.aviationweather.gov/gfa. I've been playing with it for a bit and it is a very nice addition to available weather products.