jaybee
Cleared for Takeoff
... in small aircraft before you get nervous.
okay, lets modify -
giving 5 minute hops in a helicopter, storm 10 miles (30 min) away...
... in small aircraft before you get nervous.
20nm makes sense for big (i.e. tall) TRW but 5nm is plenty far from the ones that top out in the mid 20's. You can also often tell how nasty a cell is and how much room you should give it by the color and shape of the clouds. Smooth edges and light grey, you'd probably be OK flying through it (don't though) and a 5nm separation will be fine. Dark grey, maybe 10 nm, black and/or with a bumpy lower surface dictates that 20nm or greater avoidance as does anything with an "anvil". Dark green and I don't want to be in the same county. Safe separation is also influenced by whether you're behind (where the storm came from) or ahead (where it's going) of the cell. According to what I've read, ahead is where the hail might be in clear air if it's got an anvil and the top is 45+k.+1 on hail and upwind/downwind
Impossible to fly and stay 20nm away from thunderstorms in FL in the summertime
How the heck did you manage that, I wonderI have done all of my flying in Florida, and since starting on my PPL in April 2010 have done almost 500 hrs, of which 180 hrs are cross country, typically PGD to someplace on the east coast.
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It is not easy to avoid flying without some scattered thunderstorms in the area in Florida, but even so I have personally only once been closer than 30 miles from a thunderstorm, and that was about a month ago.
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So though I think there is a chance of getting caught unprepared by a thunderstorm in Florida, my experience for me at least is by being aware of what is going on around you, and using all data sources you have available, staying at least 20 or 30 miles from a thunderstorm is even doable in Florida the vast majority of the time. There may be some need for deviations, and occasionally flight delays, or cancellations, but that the game.
Maybe lucky for some, but a lot of it is knowing that most of the thunderstorms occur in the afternoon hours and I avoid flying then, and if I have to fly then I take a good look at the weather available and the cockpit datalink while flying and avoid cells of greater than moderate rain like the plague. I video all my flights since a few months after getting my PPL, and the only time I have come close was that one time. I have a friend who almost lost his life in a thunderstorm, and do not want to have his experience.How the heck did you manage that, I wonder
Attached is a photo from two weeks ago. That particular CB is camera shy (7 lightning strikes within a minute, not a single one on camera) and also got angry when I decided to deviate around. Was showing light to moderate three minutes before the picture (and deviation)
My flights are more evenly spaced out throughout the day though. I can think of at least half a dozen thunderstorms as close as the one in the picture this summer alone. On IFR flight plans and deviating.
PS While uploading the pic, found another one just off of PBI, coming in to land. Might have posted it before, so appologies if I did. That's 2-3mo's ago.
So to avoid lightning strikes we should fly as close as possible to the "natural" lightning?Your aircraft is more likely to be struck by lightning when no natural lightning exists. It's called aircraft-induced lightning. It's very rare to be flying along and be hit by lightning during a storm with natural lightning. I explain this in more detail in this e-Tip that I sent to my members.
Maybe lucky for some, but a lot of it is knowing that most of the thunderstorms occur in the afternoon hours and I avoid flying then, and if I have to fly then I take a good look at the weather available and the cockpit datalink while flying and avoid cells of greater than moderate rain like the plague. I video all my flights since a few months after getting my PPL, and the only time I have come close was that one time. I have a friend who almost lost his life in a thunderstorm, and do not want to have his experience.
[Snip]I never (try my absolute best) fly past a towering cell without knowing if I'm upwind or downwind from it. If downwind I give it an extra wide berth. If upwind I just try to stay out of it unless I see lightning, and then I back off a bit. With the same logic I really try to avoid flying under any part of the anvil.