Could someone interpret this Metar?
KCLM 221353Z AUTO 08003KT 10SM CLR 08/06
A2976 RMK AO2 SLP079 T00780061
Temperature 08 degrees centigrade/ Dewpoint 06 degrees centigrade (fog likely)
Temperature 7.8° Dewpoint 6.1°Oh and the T00780061...I don't have a clue.
Good to know.Temperature 7.8° Dewpoint 6.1°
Generally a lot of info in the remarks is more geared toward meteorologists. For example PXXXXXX for precipitation totals.
Amazing
Temperature 7.8° Dewpoint 6.1°
Generally a lot of info in the remarks is more geared toward meteorologists. For example PXXXXXX for precipitation totals.
These things in this day and age should be in English. Waste of energy having to translate information.
Amazing
Do you need it in tenths?I'd say I need the temp/dewpoint spread more than the meteorologists do on a low IFR day...
Do you need it in tenths?
Considering the dry adiabatic lapse rate is 3 deg C per 1000 feet, not having tenths gives you a resolution of 300 feet or so. Not quite good enough for instrument approach minima. Believe me, I care about the difference between a 300 AGL ceiling and 0/0.Do you need it in tenths?
Considering the dry adiabatic lapse rate is 3 deg C per 1000 feet, not having tenths gives you a resolution of 300 feet or so. Not quite good enough for instrument approach minima. Believe me, I care about the difference between a 300 AGL ceiling and 0/0.
It does below the clouds. Dry = not saturated. It doesn't mean zero specific humidity.And if you're flying in clouds and precip, the *dry* lapse rate probably doesn't apply...
It does below the clouds. Dry = not saturated. It doesn't mean zero specific humidity.
Even in precipitation, the air is not saturated. Just not in clouds or fog.
I think his point was that you shouldn't be able to get it in non-english, anywhere!No translation required. www.aviationweather.gov/gfa offers plain English data if you ask for it.
Bob
It does below the clouds. Dry = not saturated. It doesn't mean zero specific humidity.
Even in precipitation, the air is not saturated. Just not in clouds or fog.
These things in this day and age should be in English. Waste of energy having to translate information.
There is some interesting physics in that. The moist adiabatic lapse rate is different because additional energy is added by condensation as the air rises. That energy goes into warmer temperatures than you would have with unsaturated air, at the same altitude. Very roughly, the lapse rate is halved, making the air less stable. I'm sure you've noticed turbulence entering clouds.I did not know this. Thanks!
The FAA will change it so that everyone has to buy expensive equipment for their airplanes to display plain English weather reports.Always been a complaint of a lot of pilots for years, and we all have bitched about it for years. Still the government doesn't simplify weather reports in plain ole English.
The FAA will change it so that everyone has to buy expensive equipment for their airplanes to display plain English weather reports.
And there is a few good apps for this....EFBs like Foreflight and Garmin Pilot translate METAR and TAFS automatically.
Could someone interpret this Metar?
KCLM 221353Z AUTO 08003KT 10SM CLR 08/06
A2976 RMK AO2 SLP079 T00780061
Thanks
This metar was issued on the 22nd @ 1353 Zulu
Automated Report
Winds 080 @ 3 knots (east winds)
10 statute miles of visibility
Clear skies
Temperature 08 degrees centigrade/ Dewpoint 06 degrees centigrade (fog likely)
Altimeter 2976
Remarks: this reporting station has a precipitation descriminator hence the A02.
Sea Level Pressure 1007.9
True, sir.But is that 080 direction measured from True North, or Magnetic North?
True, sir.
Are you asking these as rhetorical questions or to actually find out the answer?How are winds reported in ATIS; True or Magnetic?
How are winds reported in ATIS; True or Magnetic?
No worries. In that case I'm happy to answer. A quick rule of thumb is that if you read it, than it's true and if you hear it, than it's magnetic.I'm sorry. I was trying to lead into one discrepancy that I've never been able to reconcile. ATIS reports winds in Magnetic Direction. METARs report winds in True Direction. I've never heard an ATIS that reported anything other than METAR published winds. One of those reports must be wrong. Who knows which one? I don't.
I understand that, but when ATIS says winds are 150 at 8 and the METAR reads winds 150 at 8, they cant both be in Magnetic and True direction, respectively.