CerroTorre
Pre-takeoff checklist
- Joined
- Nov 1, 2020
- Messages
- 136
- Display Name
Display name:
CerroTorre
Hi everybody, I’m in the process of dusting off the rust after a long time away, and I’m finding that some aspects of weather are just as confusing as they used to be... Hopefully somebody can spell it out for this aging brain...
So here’s a couple quote sfrom the Jeppesen PPL book I’m re-reading: “wind always shifts to the right in the northern hemisphere” and “When you are flying through a front at low to middle altitudes, you will always need to correct to the right in order to maintain your original ground track.”
Ok, when I plot out a frontal wind shift from SSW to WNW (as described in the textbook), and a northbound course across the front, that results in a correction to the LEFT. What am I getting wrong?
I know this may seem ridiculously specific, but something about wind behavior around Highs, Lows and fronts has ALWAYS been confusing - usually related to how it changes depending on specific location of the observer.
Anybody able to offer any clarification to the main question above?
So here’s a couple quote sfrom the Jeppesen PPL book I’m re-reading: “wind always shifts to the right in the northern hemisphere” and “When you are flying through a front at low to middle altitudes, you will always need to correct to the right in order to maintain your original ground track.”
Ok, when I plot out a frontal wind shift from SSW to WNW (as described in the textbook), and a northbound course across the front, that results in a correction to the LEFT. What am I getting wrong?
I know this may seem ridiculously specific, but something about wind behavior around Highs, Lows and fronts has ALWAYS been confusing - usually related to how it changes depending on specific location of the observer.
Anybody able to offer any clarification to the main question above?