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PHILIP GREENSPUN: We're going
to talk about meteorology.

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So as pilots, we're just trying
to understand the basics.

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And in terms of
passing the exam,

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you don't need to
be a physicist.

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You just mostly
are trying to learn

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stuff that will help you fly
within the VFR weather minimums

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and predict when those minimums
aren't likely to be met

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or when there's going to
be really serious hazards,

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such as thunderstorms.

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All right, this
will be on the test.

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You have to memorize
all of this.

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Well, you kind of do.

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Anyways, they want you--

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you will have to learn some
of this stuff for the exam.

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In reality around here,
almost all airspace

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is at least class echo.

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That's controlled airspace.

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It means controllers
could give you a clearance

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to fly on instruments
and separate you

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from other aircraft.

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So they want you to be
well separated from clouds,

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1,000 feet above, 500 feet
underneath, 2,000 horizontally.

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That way, if an aircraft under
IFR comes out of the clouds,

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there'll be some time
for the two of you

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to see and avoid each other.

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You can see the weather minimums
are different in class Golf

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airspace.

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And, actually, in
uncontrolled airspace

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like up in Alaska, if you're
flying on instruments,

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you don't have a clearance.

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So you'll say, well,
how is that possible?

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You can be instrument rated,
have an instrument capable

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airplane, and fly from airport
to airport in the clouds.

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But the air traffic controllers,
they can't give you a clearance

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and guarantee you separation
from other aircraft

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because they don't have radar.

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They don't even
have the authority.

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It's not controlled airspace.

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I've done some flying up
there in little airplanes,

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and you have to be very patient.

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Another interesting thing
to notice about this--

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we'll talk about it
more again later--

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is notice how class
Bravo airspace

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has lower minimums than
ordinary class Echo airspace.

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So we have to be 1,000
feet from the clouds here.

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Here we just have to
be clear of the clouds.

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Why are the minimums reduced
right around Logan Airport

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and JFK and LAX than they are--

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AUDIENCE: Because everyone's
in contact with the tower

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so the tower knows
where everyone is.

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PHILIP GREENSPUN:
Yeah, great answer.

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So her answer is that
air traffic control

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is in contact with everybody
in class Bravo airspace

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and knows where they are.

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And in fact, they're
on clearances

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in class Bravo airspace, so
they're being told what to do.

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Fly this heading.

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Fly that heading.

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Maintain this altitude.

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Great answer.

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All right, so how do we know
if the weather minimums are

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going to be maintained?

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Let's talk about weather theory.

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So raise your hand if
you're a science major here

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as opposed to engineering?

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Where are the smart scientists?

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All right, Francis.

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So the science
approach to this task

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would be to say if we could just
assume that humans are only 4

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inches tall, then we could build
some really great aircraft.

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And we'll get into
that in a moment.

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Just think about that.

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If you're a scientist,
how much flexibility

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can you have compared
to being an engineer?

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All right, so let's look at
the atmosphere that we do have.

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Mostly, the troposphere
tops out around 40,000 feet

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according to this chart.

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And that's where most
of the water vapor

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is and, therefore, most
of the weather, also

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the higher temperatures.

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You can see it actually does
get warm again way up high

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in the thermosphere.

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This is in kilometers
on the left.

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So you can see that part of the
earth that we're flying through

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is really just, I don't know,
probably around 20 kilometers

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and down.

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What did I say?

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Said he could go up to
65,000 feet in this F-22.

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So that's what?

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That's a little over 10 miles.

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Yeah, it's about 20 kilometers,
somewhere in that neighborhood.

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Anyway, so not too many
people are going higher

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than just the bottom 0
through 20 on this chart.

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All right, who's concerned
about global inequality?

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Raise your hand.

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Awesome.

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Well, you'll be pleased to
know that so is the FAA.

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And this figure here shows you
why it's warmer at the equator

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than up at the North Pole.

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There's the same amount--

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we're missing a little bit
of tilt here, but that's OK.

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There's the same amount of
incoming solar radiation,

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but it gets spread out over
a larger portion of the earth

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up near the poles.

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All right, so this is where
guys like Francis have it easy.

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If you want to
understand something,

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you just say, well, you
know, I've got an earth,

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and it's pretty much the
same as the existing earth.

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It just doesn't have
any water on it.

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And it doesn't
rotate, and it's not

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tilted with respect to the sun.

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So now I'll do my analysis.

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And I'll publish my paper.

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And I'll get tenure, and
your problem is solved.

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Let's see.

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What would happen here?

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In a non-rotating,
non-tilted waterless earth,

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it would get hotter
at the equator,

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and the air would
rise up from the heat.

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So we can see that here.

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So we would have low pressure
right there at the equator.

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And then the air
would circulate up,

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and we would have high
pressure up at the polls.

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Does that makes
sense to everybody?

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All right, great,
problem solved.

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We can go home.

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Unfortunately, as
engineers, we have

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to deal with the real
world a little bit more.

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So if we're spinning
around the Earth,

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We're going to end up
with these three cells

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and in each hemisphere.

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And in this case,
you end up still

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with a low pressure
at the equator.

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But then you get a high pressure
with all the air sinking down

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here.

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And you get still low pressure--

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you still get high pressure up
at the polls and low pressure

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down here.

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See if I got that right.

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High.

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I should be high.

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It says high pressure
at 30 degrees North.

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Oh yeah, high,
high, that's good.

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And, yes, and low and low.

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All right, we got that right.

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It gets more
confusing as you see.

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OK, so the
circulation-- one thing

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that the FAA wants
you to know is

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that it's heat exchange
that drives the weather.

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So the weather is basically a
function of the sun heating up

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the earth.

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And then it's not
uniform, so the heat

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gets pushed from one part
of the earth to another.

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And all of this
unequal heating is

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responsible for the
altimeter varying,

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for wind blowing around.

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Pretty much every phenomenon
that is of interest to pilots

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is caused by heat trying
to move from the hotter

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parts of the earth to the
colder parts of the earth.

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We'll talk a little
bit more about these.

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But notice there's
parts of the earth

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that are windier than others.

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Unfortunately, we're in
one of the windier parts.

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OK, so you also have to know as
a pilot just what an isobar is.

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That's a line of equal pressure.

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And that tells you--

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that gives you an idea of how
the wind is going to move.

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We'll see that in a minute.

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The tighter the isobars,
the more dramatic

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the pressure change in a region.

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And it's the pressure
gradient force

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that's causing the wind
to flow from the high

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to the low pressure.

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So you might think
on this chart,

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for example, that wherever
you see an L and an H

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that you would just draw a
vector of wind from one place

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to the other, right?

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That kind of makes sense.

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However, there is
Coriolis force.

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This is for Francis,
the science major.

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Francis, what course are you?

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AUDIENCE: I'm course
9, so [INAUDIBLE]..

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PHILIP GREENSPUN: Oh.

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All right, so scientists
wear lab coats.

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[LAUGHTER]

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Coriolis force is a fake
news force formerly known

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as fictitious.

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So you can see they're
throwing the ball straight.

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But because they're on
a rotating platform,

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it's apparently curving.

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So camera is mounted
to the ground,

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and we'll see the
ball going straight.

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They're going to draw you a
little dash line at one point

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so you can see the path
is actually straight.

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So the ball has an inertia.

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Basically, once
it's launched, it

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wants to keep doing
whatever it was doing.

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And this guy's white
lab coated colleague

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just moves away from
where the ball was going.

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Whoa.

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All right, everybody's got that?

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That's Coriolis force for you.

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00:10:55,480 --> 00:10:59,620
What happens when we
do this on the earth?

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So think about it.

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00:11:00,400 --> 00:11:02,260
You have a parcel
of air that's moving

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00:11:02,260 --> 00:11:04,430
with the earth at the equator.

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00:11:04,430 --> 00:11:07,300
If you displace it up
to a higher latitude,

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00:11:07,300 --> 00:11:11,230
it still has that velocity.

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00:11:11,230 --> 00:11:13,690
But now the Earth
isn't spinning as fast.

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00:11:13,690 --> 00:11:19,060
So it ends up essentially moving
a little bit to the right.

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00:11:19,060 --> 00:11:22,355
That is the fundamental insight
just as you saw in that video.

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00:11:22,355 --> 00:11:24,730
You'll have to go home and
think about that a little bit.

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00:11:24,730 --> 00:11:28,240
But, basically, I think
the most effective way

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00:11:28,240 --> 00:11:31,150
to think about it is just
that a parcel of air that

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00:11:31,150 --> 00:11:34,180
was the equator wants to keep
moving as if it were still

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00:11:34,180 --> 00:11:37,460
at the equator, but
it's not there anymore,

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00:11:37,460 --> 00:11:41,170
so it moves relative to
the underlying earth.

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00:11:43,750 --> 00:11:46,420
If you combine the Coriolis
force and the pressure

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00:11:46,420 --> 00:11:50,050
gradient, then you get
the actual wind direction.

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00:11:50,050 --> 00:11:53,350
And the trend as seen here--

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00:11:53,350 --> 00:11:55,240
eventually, there's
so much Coriolis force

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00:11:55,240 --> 00:11:57,640
over so much time
that the wind actually

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00:11:57,640 --> 00:12:03,495
moves exactly 90 degrees to
where you think it should move.

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00:12:03,495 --> 00:12:08,920
It flows along the isobars
instead of perpendicular

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00:12:08,920 --> 00:12:10,520
across them.

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00:12:10,520 --> 00:12:15,280
So there you have a
couple pressure systems

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00:12:15,280 --> 00:12:19,360
and you see that the wind is
circulating around these lows

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00:12:19,360 --> 00:12:23,890
and highs rather than flowing
directly from one to the other

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00:12:23,890 --> 00:12:24,670
as you'd expect.

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00:12:27,680 --> 00:12:35,180
All right, who would like to
become a helicopter test pilot?

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00:12:35,180 --> 00:12:37,970
Raise your hand if that
sounds like a fun job.

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00:12:37,970 --> 00:12:41,900
OK, so when you're developing
the manual for your Sikorsky

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00:12:41,900 --> 00:12:44,270
helicopter, you've
got to go somewhere

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00:12:44,270 --> 00:12:46,670
where the wind is calm.

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00:12:46,670 --> 00:12:49,340
Where would you all
suggest going now

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00:12:49,340 --> 00:12:51,693
that you've seen this chart?

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00:12:51,693 --> 00:12:52,610
What's your name, sir?

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00:12:52,610 --> 00:12:53,260
Sorry.

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00:12:53,260 --> 00:12:54,020
AUDIENCE: Jeremy.

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00:12:54,020 --> 00:12:56,560
PHILIP GREENSPUN: Jeremy,
where do you want to go?

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00:12:56,560 --> 00:12:58,550
You're going to take
your Sikorsky helicopter

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00:12:58,550 --> 00:12:59,967
and you're going
to write the POH.

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00:12:59,967 --> 00:13:01,220
AUDIENCE: [INAUDIBLE] Florida.

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00:13:01,220 --> 00:13:02,390
PHILIP GREENSPUN: Florida.

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00:13:02,390 --> 00:13:05,810
Sikorsky, which is
headquartered in Connecticut,

246
00:13:05,810 --> 00:13:07,760
they have a big
flight test facility.

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00:13:07,760 --> 00:13:10,340
I believe it's in Palm Beach.

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00:13:10,340 --> 00:13:12,355
So there you have it.

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00:13:12,355 --> 00:13:15,200
They thought just along
the same lines as you,

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00:13:15,200 --> 00:13:17,540
and they'll be in
the horse latitudes.

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00:13:17,540 --> 00:13:20,150
There's a whole bunch of--

252
00:13:20,150 --> 00:13:22,520
nobody really knows why it's
called the horse latitudes.

253
00:13:22,520 --> 00:13:24,862
One idea is that the ships--

254
00:13:24,862 --> 00:13:26,570
since there's no wind
in those latitudes,

255
00:13:26,570 --> 00:13:28,340
they have to find a
current, and then they

256
00:13:28,340 --> 00:13:32,950
get pulled along by the current
as if they were on a horse.

257
00:13:32,950 --> 00:13:36,710
All right, surface friction
is a little bit complicated.

258
00:13:36,710 --> 00:13:38,770
It tends to drag down the wind.

259
00:13:38,770 --> 00:13:44,060
You'll have to study this
vector diagram on your own.

260
00:13:44,060 --> 00:13:46,300
But, really, from the
FAA's point of view,

261
00:13:46,300 --> 00:13:48,130
they just want
you to know mostly

262
00:13:48,130 --> 00:13:53,920
that the wind 2,000
or 3,000 feet up is

263
00:13:53,920 --> 00:13:56,200
going to be different from
the wind on the surface.

264
00:13:56,200 --> 00:13:58,020
Because of surface
friction, it will

265
00:13:58,020 --> 00:14:03,046
be less intense and in a
slightly different direction.

266
00:14:03,046 --> 00:14:06,650
OK, vertical
circulation of the air.

267
00:14:06,650 --> 00:14:10,940
I think you're going to be OK
if you just remember that warmer

268
00:14:10,940 --> 00:14:12,575
air is lighter than colder air.

269
00:14:12,575 --> 00:14:14,450
That's all that you
pretty much need to know.

270
00:14:17,270 --> 00:14:20,640
OK, local wind patterns.

271
00:14:20,640 --> 00:14:26,250
If you heat up the shore line,
the air will rise off the shore

272
00:14:26,250 --> 00:14:28,930
and pull in air from the
ocean during the daytime

273
00:14:28,930 --> 00:14:30,840
so you get that sea breeze.

274
00:14:30,840 --> 00:14:34,808
And then at nighttime,
the opposite happens,

275
00:14:34,808 --> 00:14:35,850
so you get a land breeze.

276
00:14:35,850 --> 00:14:38,980
So there are some of these
predictable local weather

277
00:14:38,980 --> 00:14:39,480
patterns.

278
00:14:42,240 --> 00:14:44,990
The bigger ones have to do
with atmospheric stability.

279
00:14:47,520 --> 00:14:52,430
If you have a stable
atmosphere, meaning

280
00:14:52,430 --> 00:14:56,120
that a displaced parcel of air
tends to get pushed back down

281
00:14:56,120 --> 00:15:02,390
to wherever it was, then you get
these weather characteristics

282
00:15:02,390 --> 00:15:05,480
where you're not going to be
bumped around in your aircraft.

283
00:15:05,480 --> 00:15:08,360
You're going to
have trouble seeing,

284
00:15:08,360 --> 00:15:11,000
and you're going to see clouds
that are basically flat,

285
00:15:11,000 --> 00:15:16,670
these stratiform clouds here
that you see on the right.

286
00:15:16,670 --> 00:15:18,740
If it rains, it's just
going to rain all day.

287
00:15:18,740 --> 00:15:21,500
It's going to be a typical
miserable New England

288
00:15:21,500 --> 00:15:25,910
day where it rains all the
time, or Seattle, I guess,

289
00:15:25,910 --> 00:15:28,130
is like that as well.

290
00:15:28,130 --> 00:15:30,620
Well, what about if
the air once displaced

291
00:15:30,620 --> 00:15:33,350
tends to want to
keep being displaced?

292
00:15:33,350 --> 00:15:35,870
If it rises up a little
bit, it keeps rising.

293
00:15:35,870 --> 00:15:38,840
Then you have these clouds
with vertical development.

294
00:15:38,840 --> 00:15:42,182
And the good news is
you can see really well.

295
00:15:42,182 --> 00:15:44,390
You're not going to have an
obstruction to visibility

296
00:15:44,390 --> 00:15:47,720
unless you're in heavy rain.

297
00:15:47,720 --> 00:15:50,810
And the rain won't be
all day, every day.

298
00:15:50,810 --> 00:15:53,930
It'll be showery, but
it'll be very turbulent

299
00:15:53,930 --> 00:15:56,750
if you get into that
cloud or maybe right

300
00:15:56,750 --> 00:15:58,955
underneath that cloud.

301
00:15:58,955 --> 00:16:07,200
OK, what about the
profile of the atmosphere?

302
00:16:07,200 --> 00:16:10,470
Let's have a look at this.

303
00:16:10,470 --> 00:16:11,210
So on the right--

304
00:16:14,510 --> 00:16:16,640
I wonder if this is
actually my newest

305
00:16:16,640 --> 00:16:17,840
version of the presentation.

306
00:16:17,840 --> 00:16:19,010
We'll see.

307
00:16:19,010 --> 00:16:20,840
I corrected an error.

308
00:16:20,840 --> 00:16:24,380
On the right, you can see that
for every 1,000 feet you go up.

309
00:16:24,380 --> 00:16:27,230
So we go from 0
to 1,000 feet up.

310
00:16:27,230 --> 00:16:30,060
The temperature is gone
from 18 Celsius to 15,

311
00:16:30,060 --> 00:16:32,450
so it's lapsed by 3 degrees.

312
00:16:32,450 --> 00:16:35,981
And the dew point has gone
down by half a degree.

313
00:16:35,981 --> 00:16:37,400
Does that makes sense?

314
00:16:37,400 --> 00:16:40,070
The air goes up,
it's lower pressure.

315
00:16:40,070 --> 00:16:43,270
This is called an
adiabatic process.

316
00:16:43,270 --> 00:16:45,710
I was not a chemistry
major, but I

317
00:16:45,710 --> 00:16:50,240
think that means that we're
not adding or taking away

318
00:16:50,240 --> 00:16:51,530
heat from the air.

319
00:16:51,530 --> 00:16:52,980
We're just moving it.

320
00:16:52,980 --> 00:16:57,530
So the temperature
and dew point spread,

321
00:16:57,530 --> 00:16:59,240
actually does get narrower.

322
00:16:59,240 --> 00:17:02,780
You can see as we rise up to
5,000 feet that the spread has

323
00:17:02,780 --> 00:17:06,380
gone down to 2 and 1/2 degrees
because the dew point is not

324
00:17:06,380 --> 00:17:10,529
falling nearly as fast as
the overall temperature.

325
00:17:10,529 --> 00:17:11,404
Does that make sense?

326
00:17:11,404 --> 00:17:14,990
So I think this conceivably
could be an FAA test

327
00:17:14,990 --> 00:17:21,430
question that the dry adiabatic
lapse rate is 3 degrees.

328
00:17:21,430 --> 00:17:26,589
OK, then the moist air is
lapsing only at 2 degrees.

329
00:17:26,589 --> 00:17:32,690
So this figure shows you
going from 0 to 1,000 feet,

330
00:17:32,690 --> 00:17:36,500
and from 1 to 2,000
feet, we were dropping

331
00:17:36,500 --> 00:17:39,830
3 degrees per thousand feet.

332
00:17:39,830 --> 00:17:44,070
After that, we're dropping only
2 degrees per thousand feet.

333
00:17:44,070 --> 00:17:47,790
And once the temperature
dew point spread goes to 0,

334
00:17:47,790 --> 00:17:50,050
that's when a cloud happens.

335
00:17:50,050 --> 00:17:52,900
So the air can't hold
anymore water vapor.

336
00:17:52,900 --> 00:17:58,320
And when the temperature
and dew point meet,

337
00:17:58,320 --> 00:18:00,055
the water vapor
turns into water,

338
00:18:00,055 --> 00:18:03,200
and now you've got a cloud.

339
00:18:03,200 --> 00:18:07,690
All right, so you might
ask yourself, well,

340
00:18:07,690 --> 00:18:10,540
why is this air moving at all?

341
00:18:10,540 --> 00:18:12,130
Why does it start moving?

342
00:18:12,130 --> 00:18:15,380
One thing that can start it
moving is a mountain range.

343
00:18:15,380 --> 00:18:19,090
So the air gets pushed
by a wind coming

344
00:18:19,090 --> 00:18:23,050
from the left side of the slide
up the top of the mountain.

345
00:18:23,050 --> 00:18:27,760
And at that point, it will
condense into a cloud.

346
00:18:31,470 --> 00:18:34,000
Just let you absorb that
cloud here for a minute.

347
00:18:34,000 --> 00:18:35,880
Notice also that
relative humidity is just

348
00:18:35,880 --> 00:18:39,340
another way of stating the
temperature dew point spread.

349
00:18:39,340 --> 00:18:41,880
So here temperature and
dew point are pretty close,

350
00:18:41,880 --> 00:18:44,400
10 and 15 or 15 and 10.

351
00:18:44,400 --> 00:18:47,010
So we've got relative
humidity of 80%.

352
00:18:47,010 --> 00:18:50,610
Over here, they're
quite far apart.

353
00:18:50,610 --> 00:18:53,760
The temperature is 23, and
the dew point is minus 2.

354
00:18:53,760 --> 00:18:57,790
So the relative humidity is low.

355
00:18:57,790 --> 00:19:01,270
OK, you've heard that there's
a cold front coming in

356
00:19:01,270 --> 00:19:03,040
and we have all
these thunderstorms.

357
00:19:03,040 --> 00:19:03,790
Well, this is why.

358
00:19:03,790 --> 00:19:07,490
The cold air is denser
than the warm air.

359
00:19:07,490 --> 00:19:09,980
So it pushes the warm air up.

360
00:19:09,980 --> 00:19:12,490
And at that point, you
get clouds forming,

361
00:19:12,490 --> 00:19:14,860
and you get thunderstorms
all along the line

362
00:19:14,860 --> 00:19:16,860
of the cold front.

363
00:19:16,860 --> 00:19:19,230
OK, so what if you
have stable air?

364
00:19:19,230 --> 00:19:20,370
Let's have a look at this.

365
00:19:25,980 --> 00:19:26,750
You end up--

366
00:19:30,520 --> 00:19:31,160
Let's see.

367
00:19:35,770 --> 00:19:46,390
We've gone from 0, to
1, to 2, and we're only

368
00:19:46,390 --> 00:19:48,370
dropping-- actually,
we're not dropping at all.

369
00:19:48,370 --> 00:19:49,328
And then we're back up.

370
00:19:49,328 --> 00:19:50,590
This is an inversion.

371
00:19:50,590 --> 00:19:53,350
OK, so, basically,
the air temperature

372
00:19:53,350 --> 00:19:56,780
is pretty constant as we go up.

373
00:19:56,780 --> 00:20:11,260
So if a parcel of air rises
up into the atmosphere,

374
00:20:11,260 --> 00:20:16,330
it's not going to be warmer
than the surrounding air,

375
00:20:16,330 --> 00:20:20,340
so it doesn't want
to keep rising.

376
00:20:20,340 --> 00:20:22,920
OK, what if it's unstable?

377
00:20:22,920 --> 00:20:24,740
So look at this by contrast.

378
00:20:24,740 --> 00:20:26,210
The environmental
air temperature

379
00:20:26,210 --> 00:20:28,790
is lapsing at a higher
than standard rate.

380
00:20:31,730 --> 00:20:36,250
It's going down 4 degrees
Celsius per thousand feet.

381
00:20:36,250 --> 00:20:40,810
And this parcel of air
that was in equilibrium

382
00:20:40,810 --> 00:20:49,120
down at sea level is still
warmer than the surrounding

383
00:20:49,120 --> 00:20:51,340
air, and, therefore, it
wants to keep rising.

384
00:20:51,340 --> 00:20:53,720
Does that make sense?

385
00:20:53,720 --> 00:20:58,030
So, basically, if it goes up
and it wants to keep going up,

386
00:20:58,030 --> 00:21:01,090
that's unstable and
a perfect situation

387
00:21:01,090 --> 00:21:05,950
for forming thunderstorms,
which we'll talk about shortly.

388
00:21:05,950 --> 00:21:09,520
Temperature inversion like
we saw on that earlier slide

389
00:21:09,520 --> 00:21:14,560
where it was actually a
little bit warmer here,

390
00:21:14,560 --> 00:21:21,310
that tends to keep
air where it is,

391
00:21:21,310 --> 00:21:23,470
and, therefore, you end
up with poor visibility

392
00:21:23,470 --> 00:21:25,660
and haze because
all the stuff that's

393
00:21:25,660 --> 00:21:27,430
obscuring your visibility
is just staying

394
00:21:27,430 --> 00:21:28,833
underneath the inversion.

395
00:21:28,833 --> 00:21:30,250
It's kind of a
common phenomenon I

396
00:21:30,250 --> 00:21:32,800
think in some of these
basins like Los Angeles.

397
00:21:32,800 --> 00:21:36,035
Talk about an inversion,
and ordinary people

398
00:21:36,035 --> 00:21:38,410
think about that, and hear
that term, and worry about it.

399
00:21:41,140 --> 00:21:44,680
Most frequently-- you're going
to I think see this on a test

400
00:21:44,680 --> 00:21:45,570
maybe--

401
00:21:45,570 --> 00:21:53,350
is phenomena having to do with
the ground radiating back heat

402
00:21:53,350 --> 00:21:56,440
into the atmosphere or
into space at night.

403
00:21:56,440 --> 00:21:58,990
Tends to make the
ground cold and the air

404
00:21:58,990 --> 00:22:02,560
right next to the ground cold,
whereas the air just slightly

405
00:22:02,560 --> 00:22:04,750
higher than that, a
couple thousand feet up,

406
00:22:04,750 --> 00:22:07,430
hasn't changed the
temperature too much.

407
00:22:07,430 --> 00:22:12,400
So the terrestrial radiation
on a clear still night

408
00:22:12,400 --> 00:22:15,400
can cause a
temperature inversion.

409
00:22:15,400 --> 00:22:20,380
We talked about this earlier
when the temperature and dew

410
00:22:20,380 --> 00:22:26,130
point meet, and that's when
the water vapor will condense.

411
00:22:26,130 --> 00:22:27,030
Frost.

412
00:22:27,030 --> 00:22:32,740
When the dew point
is below freezing

413
00:22:32,740 --> 00:22:38,190
and you have a surface that's
cold, then you will get--

414
00:22:38,190 --> 00:22:40,860
maybe it's cold because
it radiated its heat

415
00:22:40,860 --> 00:22:43,260
back out into space
at night, for example.

416
00:22:43,260 --> 00:22:46,260
That's when you
get frost forming.

417
00:22:46,260 --> 00:22:48,630
And you want to definitely
clear that off your aircraft

418
00:22:48,630 --> 00:22:53,580
before you go anywhere
because it messes

419
00:22:53,580 --> 00:22:58,080
with the smooth flow of the air,
so the wing becomes much less

420
00:22:58,080 --> 00:23:02,220
efficient even if the shape
hasn't changed that much.

421
00:23:02,220 --> 00:23:04,095
All right, let's look
at the kinds of clouds.

422
00:23:07,290 --> 00:23:14,520
You've got basically--
the prefix to the cloud

423
00:23:14,520 --> 00:23:18,630
tells you what height it is.

424
00:23:18,630 --> 00:23:21,360
And then the second
part of the word

425
00:23:21,360 --> 00:23:24,930
tells you kind of the
shape of the cloud.

426
00:23:24,930 --> 00:23:29,430
So I'll just let you
absorb this a little bit.

427
00:23:29,430 --> 00:23:34,460
If it says nimbo, yeah,
cumulonimbus or nimbostratus,

428
00:23:34,460 --> 00:23:37,550
that means it's raining.

429
00:23:37,550 --> 00:23:42,260
Towering cumulus is bad
if they talk about that.

430
00:23:42,260 --> 00:23:43,790
And cumulonimbus is the worst.

431
00:23:43,790 --> 00:23:48,620
That's just another fancier
way of saying thunderstorm.

432
00:23:48,620 --> 00:23:53,580
OK, so here's your
Latin lesson for today.

433
00:23:53,580 --> 00:23:55,200
Unfortunately, I
didn't study Latin.

434
00:23:55,200 --> 00:23:57,890
It would have been
nice when I went

435
00:23:57,890 --> 00:23:59,810
to Peru to be able
to communicate

436
00:23:59,810 --> 00:24:05,060
with the locals
in Latin America.

437
00:24:05,060 --> 00:24:06,320
OK, that wasn't funny I guess.

438
00:24:06,320 --> 00:24:09,722
[LAUGHTER]

439
00:24:12,650 --> 00:24:18,320
If you have low clouds, the
main hazard to worry about

440
00:24:18,320 --> 00:24:20,180
is the icing.

441
00:24:20,180 --> 00:24:24,800
If the water is supercooled,
that's the worst.

442
00:24:24,800 --> 00:24:27,717
You can usually get
a forecast of that.

443
00:24:27,717 --> 00:24:29,300
You'll get AIRMETs
for icing, and they

444
00:24:29,300 --> 00:24:33,545
might talk about supercooled
water is a hazard.

445
00:24:36,530 --> 00:24:38,720
I guess this might
be an exam question.

446
00:24:38,720 --> 00:24:43,850
Stratus clouds form when moist,
stable air flows upslope.

447
00:24:43,850 --> 00:24:49,310
But just remember stable
usually means the flat clouds,

448
00:24:49,310 --> 00:24:50,740
stratiform clouds.

449
00:24:50,740 --> 00:24:55,745
And unstable is where you
get the cumuliform clouds.

450
00:25:02,090 --> 00:25:03,230
So same deal.

451
00:25:03,230 --> 00:25:04,880
Those altocumulus
are going to be

452
00:25:04,880 --> 00:25:13,690
much more turbulent and probably
more severe icing potential.

453
00:25:13,690 --> 00:25:19,390
The high clouds-- it's so
cold in the high atmosphere

454
00:25:19,390 --> 00:25:22,720
that the maximum amount of
water that can be stored

455
00:25:22,720 --> 00:25:25,570
is pretty low,
and, therefore, you

456
00:25:25,570 --> 00:25:28,780
don't tend to get
ice when it's below

457
00:25:28,780 --> 00:25:32,260
say minus 15 degrees Celsius.

458
00:25:32,260 --> 00:25:35,110
There just isn't a whole lot
of moisture to begin with.

459
00:25:38,790 --> 00:25:41,910
OK, so this is
what as a GA pilot

460
00:25:41,910 --> 00:25:44,608
you're more likely to
have to worry about.

461
00:25:44,608 --> 00:25:46,650
You're probably not going
to be up at 25,000 feet

462
00:25:46,650 --> 00:25:48,360
in your Piper Warrior.

463
00:25:48,360 --> 00:25:57,038
But you could be
underneath a cumulus cloud.

464
00:25:57,038 --> 00:25:58,830
I will tell you that
if you have passengers

465
00:25:58,830 --> 00:26:01,470
and there is low cumulus
clouds, you desperately

466
00:26:01,470 --> 00:26:02,860
want to get above those.

467
00:26:02,860 --> 00:26:05,700
So let's say there's a bunch
of cumulus clouds at 4,000

468
00:26:05,700 --> 00:26:07,290
or 5,000 feet.

469
00:26:07,290 --> 00:26:10,500
You can climb probably
to 8,000 or 10,000 feet

470
00:26:10,500 --> 00:26:13,120
in a light airplane, and
that'll be much, much smoother.

471
00:26:13,120 --> 00:26:16,470
So as soon as you get
above the cumulus clouds,

472
00:26:16,470 --> 00:26:18,750
that's where the air
tends to smooth out,

473
00:26:18,750 --> 00:26:21,180
and it'll be much
more comfortable.

474
00:26:21,180 --> 00:26:23,730
But if it's a towering
cumulus cloud,

475
00:26:23,730 --> 00:26:29,130
they may go up to as high as
60,000 feet down in Texas.

476
00:26:29,130 --> 00:26:30,660
And you really
can't get over them

477
00:26:30,660 --> 00:26:36,870
in anything short of an
SR-71 or maybe last as F-22.

478
00:26:36,870 --> 00:26:41,970
Even the latest Gulfstreams
only go to 51,000, I believe.

479
00:26:41,970 --> 00:26:44,750
OK, so thunderstorms
are the worst hazard.

480
00:26:44,750 --> 00:26:47,700
Even the airliners get in
trouble and thunderstorms

481
00:26:47,700 --> 00:26:55,790
with hail smashing into the
windshield and turbulence that

482
00:26:55,790 --> 00:26:58,930
can bend stuff.

483
00:26:58,930 --> 00:27:08,500
So how do you predict
if you're flying along--

484
00:27:08,500 --> 00:27:10,580
well, if you're preparing
to go on a flight,

485
00:27:10,580 --> 00:27:12,788
how do you predict where
the clouds are likely to be?

486
00:27:12,788 --> 00:27:16,130
One thing you do is look at the
temperature dew point spread.

487
00:27:16,130 --> 00:27:21,255
The FAA tells you to use a lapse
rate of 2.5 degrees Celsius

488
00:27:21,255 --> 00:27:22,880
to figure out where
the clouds will be.

489
00:27:22,880 --> 00:27:28,240
So if there is a 10 degree
temperature dew point spread,

490
00:27:28,240 --> 00:27:30,740
then you should expect
the clouds to have

491
00:27:30,740 --> 00:27:32,480
a base at about 4,000 feet.

492
00:27:32,480 --> 00:27:33,780
There's a typo in the slide.

493
00:27:33,780 --> 00:27:34,760
Sorry about that.

494
00:27:34,760 --> 00:27:37,340
I thought we had the new
version in the Dropbox.

495
00:27:37,340 --> 00:27:42,590
The temperature lapses at 3
for the dry adiabatic air.

496
00:27:42,590 --> 00:27:43,590
You remember that?

497
00:27:43,590 --> 00:27:45,415
And the dew point's at 0.5.

498
00:27:45,415 --> 00:27:46,790
So if we go back
to that figure--

499
00:27:52,080 --> 00:27:55,690
I think it was our-- yeah.

500
00:27:55,690 --> 00:27:59,640
Yeah, if we go back
here, you remember this?

501
00:27:59,640 --> 00:28:02,530
We went from 18, to 15, to 12.

502
00:28:02,530 --> 00:28:05,260
And the dew point, meanwhile,
is falling from 3, to 2 and 1/2,

503
00:28:05,260 --> 00:28:06,430
to 2.

504
00:28:06,430 --> 00:28:07,270
So that's why.

505
00:28:10,930 --> 00:28:13,060
It's 2.5 as a rule of thumb.

506
00:28:13,060 --> 00:28:16,300
That's not great, but
you can actually--

507
00:28:16,300 --> 00:28:19,843
Just look at METARs
around the country,

508
00:28:19,843 --> 00:28:21,760
and I think you will see
because they give you

509
00:28:21,760 --> 00:28:24,130
the basis of the clouds
and the ceilings.

510
00:28:24,130 --> 00:28:26,260
I think you usually
will see that it's

511
00:28:26,260 --> 00:28:31,810
reasonably close to this formula
but almost never spot on.

512
00:28:31,810 --> 00:28:38,620
OK, this is worth studying.

513
00:28:38,620 --> 00:28:41,300
I'm not going to cover
it completely here.

514
00:28:41,300 --> 00:28:44,540
But some of these
are exam questions.

515
00:28:44,540 --> 00:28:46,420
Advection fog-- I
think I remember

516
00:28:46,420 --> 00:28:50,590
they like to ask about that,
when the warm moist air moves

517
00:28:50,590 --> 00:28:55,253
over a cool surface
along coastlines.

518
00:28:55,253 --> 00:28:56,420
So I think that makes sense.

519
00:28:56,420 --> 00:28:58,520
Maybe that's what they're
having in California

520
00:28:58,520 --> 00:28:59,650
a lot of the time.

521
00:28:59,650 --> 00:29:05,455
They have the fog over
the coastal areas.

522
00:29:12,270 --> 00:29:15,810
And radiation fog-- also,
in the Western deserts,

523
00:29:15,810 --> 00:29:18,850
oftentimes, there's
fog in the morning.

524
00:29:18,850 --> 00:29:23,160
So I think you're advection fog
would be a coastal phenomenon.

525
00:29:23,160 --> 00:29:26,520
And the radiation
fog, something they

526
00:29:26,520 --> 00:29:32,750
can have in a place like
Arizona or Palm Springs.

527
00:29:32,750 --> 00:29:36,610
OK, the FAA loves this.

528
00:29:36,610 --> 00:29:39,880
If you see ice pellets, you
probably shouldn't be flying.

529
00:29:39,880 --> 00:29:44,110
But they want you to know that
if you do see ice pellets,

530
00:29:44,110 --> 00:29:47,260
how did they arrive?

531
00:29:47,260 --> 00:29:50,050
Well, they had to be
freezing rain up higher.

532
00:29:50,050 --> 00:29:52,360
So don't climb in hopes
of getting out of the ice

533
00:29:52,360 --> 00:29:56,050
pellets because then you'll have
freezing rain on your airplane

534
00:29:56,050 --> 00:29:58,960
which is probably the worst
kind of icing-related hazard.

535
00:30:01,580 --> 00:30:04,170
OK, airmasses.

536
00:30:09,470 --> 00:30:10,790
You can just have a look here.

537
00:30:13,560 --> 00:30:16,460
If you hear that there's
a polar airmass coming in,

538
00:30:16,460 --> 00:30:18,800
it's going to be cold,
not too exciting.

539
00:30:18,800 --> 00:30:19,890
Might be a question.

540
00:30:19,890 --> 00:30:21,650
Fronts, they do
want you to see--

541
00:30:21,650 --> 00:30:23,970
be able to read
one of these maps.

542
00:30:23,970 --> 00:30:25,910
They may occasionally
asked you a question.

543
00:30:25,910 --> 00:30:29,090
So one thing to remember
is the cold front

544
00:30:29,090 --> 00:30:32,260
has the pointy
spikes like icicles.

545
00:30:32,260 --> 00:30:36,140
So if you can remember
that, you'll be pretty good.

546
00:30:36,140 --> 00:30:39,410
There's a cold front.

547
00:30:39,410 --> 00:30:44,690
Again, you can just read this
and study it at your leisure.

548
00:30:48,115 --> 00:30:49,740
I guess they might
want you to remember

549
00:30:49,740 --> 00:30:54,950
that the front is the boundary
between two air masses.

550
00:30:54,950 --> 00:30:55,560
OK.

551
00:30:55,560 --> 00:30:57,440
Here's a typical
drawing where they'll

552
00:30:57,440 --> 00:30:59,420
show you the cold fronts
and the warm fronts.

553
00:31:03,070 --> 00:31:05,188
When there is a
front, how do you

554
00:31:05,188 --> 00:31:06,730
know when the front
has gone through?

555
00:31:06,730 --> 00:31:10,000
Well, the temperature's
changed and the wind's changed,

556
00:31:10,000 --> 00:31:10,750
simple as that.

557
00:31:14,020 --> 00:31:18,250
Here's a little explanation
of what you can expect

558
00:31:18,250 --> 00:31:20,860
when a cold front goes through.

559
00:31:32,800 --> 00:31:35,792
Everybody is happy with that?

560
00:31:35,792 --> 00:31:37,610
OK.

561
00:31:37,610 --> 00:31:43,030
When a warm front goes through,
it gets warmer afterwards.

562
00:31:43,030 --> 00:31:46,520
Yeah, so the warm front
produces, as you can see,

563
00:31:46,520 --> 00:31:53,332
light to moderate rain,
drizzle, visibility is bad.

564
00:31:53,332 --> 00:31:55,040
That's actually the
important thing here.

565
00:31:55,040 --> 00:31:56,960
The visibility gets poor.

566
00:31:56,960 --> 00:31:59,760
And then it becomes
fair and haze,

567
00:31:59,760 --> 00:32:06,887
whereas the visibility becomes
really good after a cold front

568
00:32:06,887 --> 00:32:07,470
comes through.

569
00:32:11,850 --> 00:32:16,984
Occluded fronts-- same
deal, bad visibility.

570
00:32:19,720 --> 00:32:20,220
All right.

571
00:32:20,220 --> 00:32:21,400
Let's talk about hazards.

572
00:32:21,400 --> 00:32:23,200
This is more important.

573
00:32:23,200 --> 00:32:34,940
So this is a summary
of where heat

574
00:32:34,940 --> 00:32:39,860
is released into the atmosphere
versus absorbed by water.

575
00:32:39,860 --> 00:32:48,650
So as the water goes, for
example, from vapor to liquid,

576
00:32:48,650 --> 00:32:50,145
it releases heat.

577
00:32:50,145 --> 00:32:51,770
So that's exactly
what's happening when

578
00:32:51,770 --> 00:32:54,170
it's raining in a thunderstorm.

579
00:32:56,870 --> 00:33:00,590
And that's not a good thing.

580
00:33:00,590 --> 00:33:01,550
All right.

581
00:33:01,550 --> 00:33:08,390
So here's the FAA's chart
of a cumulus cloud forming.

582
00:33:08,390 --> 00:33:11,480
So you can see the
lapse rate over here

583
00:33:11,480 --> 00:33:14,270
in the ambient atmosphere.

584
00:33:14,270 --> 00:33:19,550
It's going from 28
to 24 down to 21.

585
00:33:19,550 --> 00:33:25,070
So it is, at least
initially, higher

586
00:33:25,070 --> 00:33:27,050
than standard lapse rate.

587
00:33:27,050 --> 00:33:30,450
So this warm air--

588
00:33:30,450 --> 00:33:31,820
it starts at 28.

589
00:33:31,820 --> 00:33:34,280
And then it drops only to 25.

590
00:33:34,280 --> 00:33:36,830
So it's still warmer
than the surrounding air.

591
00:33:36,830 --> 00:33:42,930
So it goes into becoming
this big, nasty cloud.

592
00:33:42,930 --> 00:33:47,270
There's this-- you
can see-- if you don't

593
00:33:47,270 --> 00:33:49,880
want to look at the summaries
of weather forecasts,

594
00:33:49,880 --> 00:33:54,170
you can look at these
shards of lifted index.

595
00:33:54,170 --> 00:33:59,510
Here, it shows the difference
between minus 18 and minus 11,

596
00:33:59,510 --> 00:34:00,200
minus 7.

597
00:34:00,200 --> 00:34:03,898
That gives you a measure of
the thunderstorm potential.

598
00:34:03,898 --> 00:34:04,940
There are charts of that.

599
00:34:08,900 --> 00:34:12,620
But as pilots, this
is more what we

600
00:34:12,620 --> 00:34:14,750
deal with on our practical
day-to-day basis.

601
00:34:14,750 --> 00:34:16,760
We just look at
the next rad data

602
00:34:16,760 --> 00:34:20,130
from the radar stations that
are strewn around the country.

603
00:34:20,130 --> 00:34:22,287
And if it's red, we try
to find a path around it,

604
00:34:22,287 --> 00:34:23,870
because there's just
not much else you

605
00:34:23,870 --> 00:34:26,659
can do in a little aircraft.

606
00:34:26,659 --> 00:34:31,520
It's possible that you could
get over this entire front

607
00:34:31,520 --> 00:34:35,570
if you were in a jet
that could climb up

608
00:34:35,570 --> 00:34:37,610
to 40,000 feet or higher.

609
00:34:37,610 --> 00:34:40,397
But in a Piper or
Cessna or Cirrus,

610
00:34:40,397 --> 00:34:42,230
you're just not going
to be able to do that.

611
00:34:45,719 --> 00:34:46,350
OK.

612
00:34:46,350 --> 00:34:51,560
The thunderstorm lifecycle--
this is, I think,

613
00:34:51,560 --> 00:34:52,850
my favorite test question.

614
00:34:52,850 --> 00:34:54,650
How do you know that
the thunderstorm

615
00:34:54,650 --> 00:34:56,600
has reached its mature stage?

616
00:34:56,600 --> 00:35:00,230
Well, it's raining,
simple as that.

617
00:35:00,230 --> 00:35:03,300
If it's raining, it's mature.

618
00:35:03,300 --> 00:35:09,640
If it's dissipating, you're
going to get these downdrafts.

619
00:35:09,640 --> 00:35:12,040
If it's building,
you get updrafts.

620
00:35:12,040 --> 00:35:17,720
So everything comes up,
and then it all comes down.

621
00:35:17,720 --> 00:35:19,490
OK.

622
00:35:19,490 --> 00:35:22,267
Look at that nasty thunderstorm.

623
00:35:22,267 --> 00:35:24,350
You're going to get
turbulence right on top of it.

624
00:35:24,350 --> 00:35:27,630
If you can clear that
thunderstorm by 5,000 feet,

625
00:35:27,630 --> 00:35:29,520
it'll probably nice and smooth.

626
00:35:29,520 --> 00:35:33,272
So this is your good argument
for a plane that can go to 51

627
00:35:33,272 --> 00:35:35,690
[INAUDIBLE] or 510.

628
00:35:35,690 --> 00:35:37,020
Airliners don't go that high.

629
00:35:37,020 --> 00:35:41,640
The latest these jets go
much higher than airliners.

630
00:35:41,640 --> 00:35:42,630
All right.

631
00:35:42,630 --> 00:35:44,190
The hazard-- we're
going to hear more

632
00:35:44,190 --> 00:35:47,190
about this tomorrow
from [? Dojo, ?]

633
00:35:47,190 --> 00:35:49,950
from the Brazilian Air Force.

634
00:35:49,950 --> 00:35:59,190
But there is this chart here
that shows you how much load

635
00:35:59,190 --> 00:36:00,290
factor-- that's in g's.

636
00:36:03,650 --> 00:36:09,200
If you're going pretty
fast, you can pretty quickly

637
00:36:09,200 --> 00:36:12,350
get into the structural
damage range.

638
00:36:15,030 --> 00:36:19,020
So that's why they tell you--
this these lines here are

639
00:36:19,020 --> 00:36:19,860
basically--

640
00:36:23,560 --> 00:36:26,200
this is how many g's you
can get on the aircraft

641
00:36:26,200 --> 00:36:29,800
with either extreme
movements on the controls

642
00:36:29,800 --> 00:36:32,470
or extreme movements
that are imposed on you

643
00:36:32,470 --> 00:36:34,450
by a thunderstorm or something.

644
00:36:34,450 --> 00:36:37,450
So the takeaway
from this diagram

645
00:36:37,450 --> 00:36:40,840
is slow down if you get
into heavy turbulence,

646
00:36:40,840 --> 00:36:45,630
because then the airplane
will stall before it bends.

647
00:36:45,630 --> 00:36:51,650
And stalling can be corrected
by pushing the nose down.

648
00:36:51,650 --> 00:36:52,150
OK.

649
00:36:52,150 --> 00:36:54,580
So these are all of the
hazards from thunderstorms.

650
00:36:54,580 --> 00:36:57,710
Again, it's a lot better--

651
00:36:57,710 --> 00:36:59,710
in this day and age,
there's so much information

652
00:36:59,710 --> 00:37:02,440
out there and datalink
available in the cockpit

653
00:37:02,440 --> 00:37:05,890
that going through thunderstorms
is just much less common

654
00:37:05,890 --> 00:37:07,060
than it used to be.

655
00:37:07,060 --> 00:37:11,860
And therefore, don't really
have to remember too much, other

656
00:37:11,860 --> 00:37:15,330
than don't fly through
a thunderstorm.

657
00:37:15,330 --> 00:37:18,390
Microburst-- however, if
you're trying to land and beat

658
00:37:18,390 --> 00:37:20,465
the thunderstorm,
you can actually

659
00:37:20,465 --> 00:37:21,840
get into a little
bit of trouble,

660
00:37:21,840 --> 00:37:28,380
because the wind right before
a thunderstorm or right

661
00:37:28,380 --> 00:37:36,890
after can be pretty squirrelly
and cause you some difficulties

662
00:37:36,890 --> 00:37:39,350
here.

663
00:37:39,350 --> 00:37:39,850
Let's see.

664
00:37:39,850 --> 00:37:41,040
What do we have?

665
00:37:41,040 --> 00:37:43,330
So here, this airplane is
getting a performance boost

666
00:37:43,330 --> 00:37:45,580
from a strong headwind.

667
00:37:45,580 --> 00:37:48,040
Now, not much is
happening, except that it's

668
00:37:48,040 --> 00:37:53,270
getting pushed down, maybe
faster than the airplane can

669
00:37:53,270 --> 00:37:54,200
climb.

670
00:37:54,200 --> 00:37:57,110
And at this point, you're
getting a performance reduction

671
00:37:57,110 --> 00:37:58,145
from this big tailwind.

672
00:37:58,145 --> 00:38:00,520
So that's reducing-- you might
think, well, that's great.

673
00:38:00,520 --> 00:38:02,390
I'm getting pushed
along with a tailwind.

674
00:38:02,390 --> 00:38:05,810
But if it's suddenly
taking away your airspeed,

675
00:38:05,810 --> 00:38:09,920
then that's not a
performance boost.

676
00:38:09,920 --> 00:38:10,670
All right.

677
00:38:10,670 --> 00:38:16,280
So the thunderstorm
emergency procedures

678
00:38:16,280 --> 00:38:18,320
are, again, probably
a little bit

679
00:38:18,320 --> 00:38:20,090
less relevant now
that we're living

680
00:38:20,090 --> 00:38:27,380
in this world of constant
datalink and NEXRAD data.

681
00:38:27,380 --> 00:38:31,850
2006, there was a famous
accident with a former test

682
00:38:31,850 --> 00:38:34,580
pilot, Scott
Crossfield, who maybe

683
00:38:34,580 --> 00:38:38,180
didn't get the best advice
from air traffic control.

684
00:38:38,180 --> 00:38:44,060
And I don't think he had
datalink in his cockpit.

685
00:38:44,060 --> 00:38:46,400
The Boeing B 29 bomber
crews, they would fly,

686
00:38:46,400 --> 00:38:51,800
I think, seven or eight hours
from an island in the Pacific

687
00:38:51,800 --> 00:38:53,090
over to Japan.

688
00:38:53,090 --> 00:38:55,040
And during those
eight hours, they

689
00:38:55,040 --> 00:38:59,140
had satellite data, no
data from a ground station.

690
00:38:59,140 --> 00:39:01,390
So they just had no idea
what they were going through.

691
00:39:01,390 --> 00:39:03,620
And they didn't go as high
as the designers thought

692
00:39:03,620 --> 00:39:06,770
that airplane was designed
to go, super high.

693
00:39:06,770 --> 00:39:09,083
But they were so loaded
up with fuel and bombs,

694
00:39:09,083 --> 00:39:11,000
they couldn't practically
climb all that high.

695
00:39:11,000 --> 00:39:15,410
So they were going at
10-15,000 feet over the ocean.

696
00:39:15,410 --> 00:39:20,300
And at those altitudes,
you can't really see--

697
00:39:20,300 --> 00:39:22,820
you may get into an
embedded thunderstorm.

698
00:39:22,820 --> 00:39:27,140
Today's airliners, they go so
high that you really are never

699
00:39:27,140 --> 00:39:29,600
in a position where
you blunder into stuff,

700
00:39:29,600 --> 00:39:33,240
or almost never, because
you're in the clear,

701
00:39:33,240 --> 00:39:35,300
and you can just see
the towering cumulus

702
00:39:35,300 --> 00:39:36,480
and not fly there.

703
00:39:36,480 --> 00:39:40,290
You just back
yourself around them.

704
00:39:40,290 --> 00:39:42,600
So I guess-- yeah,
the final statement

705
00:39:42,600 --> 00:39:44,640
there is, get-there-itis
hasn't been cured.

706
00:39:44,640 --> 00:39:48,000
So as a pilot, the
safest thing you can do

707
00:39:48,000 --> 00:39:50,850
is really fight that
tendency to want

708
00:39:50,850 --> 00:39:52,740
to complete the
mission as planned

709
00:39:52,740 --> 00:39:55,230
and overcommit to
your plan of action.

710
00:39:55,230 --> 00:39:57,330
All right.

711
00:39:57,330 --> 00:40:02,010
There are three other categories
of turbulence to worry about.

712
00:40:02,010 --> 00:40:13,540
Probably the worst is due
to terrain, like mountains.

713
00:40:13,540 --> 00:40:18,340
This low level turbulence
from thermals is not crazy.

714
00:40:18,340 --> 00:40:21,430
But as I said, if you get above
the clouds, that plane on top

715
00:40:21,430 --> 00:40:25,190
is going to be in
a nice, smooth air.

716
00:40:25,190 --> 00:40:28,920
Wake turbulence [INAUDIBLE] is
also another thing to consider.

717
00:40:28,920 --> 00:40:30,270
Let's look at that.

718
00:40:30,270 --> 00:40:42,120
So if you're taking off behind
an airplane, so look at that--

719
00:40:42,120 --> 00:40:45,120
heavy, slow and in
clean configuration.

720
00:40:45,120 --> 00:40:50,220
So airplanes will tend
to retract their flaps,

721
00:40:50,220 --> 00:40:52,590
and therefore be in
a clean configuration

722
00:40:52,590 --> 00:40:55,080
shortly after takeoff,
whereas, if they're landing,

723
00:40:55,080 --> 00:40:56,112
the flaps are down.

724
00:40:56,112 --> 00:40:58,320
They're not generating quite
as much wake turbulence.

725
00:40:58,320 --> 00:41:01,500
Although, still if you land
behind a Boeing, in your little

726
00:41:01,500 --> 00:41:02,850
Cessna, you will notice that.

727
00:41:07,190 --> 00:41:09,500
The solution here--
and I think this

728
00:41:09,500 --> 00:41:13,190
is a test question--
is you land or take off

729
00:41:13,190 --> 00:41:17,220
beyond the touchdown
point of a large aircraft.

730
00:41:17,220 --> 00:41:21,870
So if the large aircraft--

731
00:41:21,870 --> 00:41:26,820
let's say the large aircraft
landed right here in front

732
00:41:26,820 --> 00:41:28,380
of the laptop on the runway.

733
00:41:28,380 --> 00:41:30,510
You just fly a
little bit higher.

734
00:41:30,510 --> 00:41:33,290
And you land maybe in
the middle of the runway.

735
00:41:33,290 --> 00:41:36,000
And that way, you can't possibly
get into wake turbulence,

736
00:41:36,000 --> 00:41:38,880
because it will have sunk below
that big aircraft's flight

737
00:41:38,880 --> 00:41:39,840
path.

738
00:41:39,840 --> 00:41:41,270
Controllers at a
towered airport,

739
00:41:41,270 --> 00:41:45,210
they'll also separate you by
the necessary number of minutes.

740
00:41:45,210 --> 00:41:48,810
They have a bunch of regulations
about how much separation

741
00:41:48,810 --> 00:41:51,630
they have to have
between aircraft.

742
00:41:51,630 --> 00:41:53,500
And then similarly,
for liftoff point--

743
00:41:53,500 --> 00:41:56,790
so if the big airplane--

744
00:41:56,790 --> 00:42:01,290
again, this is not really that
much of a practical problem,

745
00:42:01,290 --> 00:42:04,320
because so little runway
is used by light airplanes.

746
00:42:04,320 --> 00:42:08,610
But if the big airplane rotated
and took off and started

747
00:42:08,610 --> 00:42:11,280
climbing here, well,
then you take off

748
00:42:11,280 --> 00:42:13,740
and start climbing earlier.

749
00:42:13,740 --> 00:42:16,187
Of course, the climb
rate of the big airplane

750
00:42:16,187 --> 00:42:17,770
is probably a lot
better than you are.

751
00:42:17,770 --> 00:42:20,460
So you've got to think about
which way the wind is going

752
00:42:20,460 --> 00:42:23,290
and maybe try to
turn away from it.

753
00:42:23,290 --> 00:42:25,710
I've only really been
stuck in weight turbulence

754
00:42:25,710 --> 00:42:27,540
once that I can think about.

755
00:42:27,540 --> 00:42:29,040
It was at Hanscom Field.

756
00:42:29,040 --> 00:42:32,100
And there was a
heavy helicopter that

757
00:42:32,100 --> 00:42:34,080
was cleared to
land on the runway,

758
00:42:34,080 --> 00:42:36,090
and then transitioned sideways.

759
00:42:36,090 --> 00:42:37,292
And I was in the Cirrus.

760
00:42:37,292 --> 00:42:39,000
And I think the
controllers didn't really

761
00:42:39,000 --> 00:42:42,800
think about, well, how
much wake turbulence can

762
00:42:42,800 --> 00:42:44,640
a helicopter generate.

763
00:42:44,640 --> 00:42:46,530
So I was trying to land.

764
00:42:46,530 --> 00:42:49,110
And maybe about 200
feet above the ground,

765
00:42:49,110 --> 00:42:53,820
there was a sharp
wing dip that I--

766
00:42:53,820 --> 00:42:57,180
the good news is you don't have
to be heroic to correct it,

767
00:42:57,180 --> 00:42:59,490
because, if your
airplane is banked,

768
00:42:59,490 --> 00:43:02,050
the natural tendency is to
want to take the bank out.

769
00:43:02,050 --> 00:43:03,630
So whenever your
natural tendency

770
00:43:03,630 --> 00:43:09,430
is to do the safe thing, that's
usually not much of a problem.

771
00:43:09,430 --> 00:43:09,930
Oh yeah.

772
00:43:09,930 --> 00:43:13,753
So anyway, here's
the FAA question.

773
00:43:13,753 --> 00:43:14,920
Who wants to give an answer?

774
00:43:14,920 --> 00:43:15,580
Shout it out.

775
00:43:15,580 --> 00:43:16,360
A, B, or C?

776
00:43:24,160 --> 00:43:25,553
AUDIENCE: A.

777
00:43:25,553 --> 00:43:26,470
PHILIP GREENSPUN: Yay.

778
00:43:30,620 --> 00:43:31,680
All right.

779
00:43:31,680 --> 00:43:36,330
So this is a practical
issue, especially for anybody

780
00:43:36,330 --> 00:43:39,960
who wants to fly out west.

781
00:43:39,960 --> 00:43:41,790
You have the Sierra Mountains.

782
00:43:41,790 --> 00:43:44,100
You have the Rocky Mountains.

783
00:43:44,100 --> 00:43:46,680
And you have to be very careful
when crossing these mountain

784
00:43:46,680 --> 00:43:49,530
ranges.

785
00:43:49,530 --> 00:43:52,770
If the wind aloft forecast
is more than about 30 knots

786
00:43:52,770 --> 00:43:56,130
for the time that you're
planning on crossing,

787
00:43:56,130 --> 00:43:59,640
you can expect this kind of
turbulence on the lee side

788
00:43:59,640 --> 00:44:02,680
or the eastern side of
those mountain ranges.

789
00:44:02,680 --> 00:44:07,200
So when I've crossed those
mountains in light airplanes,

790
00:44:07,200 --> 00:44:11,100
I have usually done it first
thing in the morning basically.

791
00:44:11,100 --> 00:44:15,420
So I arranged to shut down
just short of the mountains

792
00:44:15,420 --> 00:44:18,330
the night before, and then
cross early in the morning

793
00:44:18,330 --> 00:44:21,330
when the winds are
typically calm.

794
00:44:21,330 --> 00:44:25,470
So you can look for
these lenticular clouds.

795
00:44:25,470 --> 00:44:27,690
But again, if you
saw the winds aloft

796
00:44:27,690 --> 00:44:30,660
forecast that it was going to
be blowing 50 knots at 12,000

797
00:44:30,660 --> 00:44:32,580
feet, you can be
pretty sure that it's

798
00:44:32,580 --> 00:44:36,580
going to be turbulent.

799
00:44:36,580 --> 00:44:37,080
All right.

800
00:44:37,080 --> 00:44:43,610
Structural icing-- you can
get rime, clear or mixed.

801
00:44:43,610 --> 00:44:47,720
I'll just let you look
through the conditions that

802
00:44:47,720 --> 00:44:48,380
lead to this.

803
00:44:56,300 --> 00:45:00,350
Clearing rime-- probably
rime icing is more common.

804
00:45:04,470 --> 00:45:06,760
What happens?

805
00:45:06,760 --> 00:45:09,713
Everything gets worse
about your aircraft.

806
00:45:09,713 --> 00:45:11,130
Especially if
you're on autopilot,

807
00:45:11,130 --> 00:45:15,890
it's a challenge to recognize
when icing is occurring.

808
00:45:15,890 --> 00:45:18,070
You can be in the air,
fat, dumb, and happy

809
00:45:18,070 --> 00:45:22,110
while the airplane gets iced up.

810
00:45:22,110 --> 00:45:27,870
So the worst part of it, I
guess, is that you can't climb.

811
00:45:27,870 --> 00:45:30,720
Basically, when your airplane
has all this performance

812
00:45:30,720 --> 00:45:34,630
reduction, you can
summarize this all--

813
00:45:34,630 --> 00:45:38,070
if it's only moderate
icing, basically you

814
00:45:38,070 --> 00:45:39,570
have an aircraft
that can't climb.

815
00:45:39,570 --> 00:45:41,130
All you can do is descend.

816
00:45:41,130 --> 00:45:45,900
So a good practical tip is, if
you're-- well, first off all,

817
00:45:45,900 --> 00:45:47,760
the good news is, if
you're a VFR pilot,

818
00:45:47,760 --> 00:45:49,620
like you guys are
going to become,

819
00:45:49,620 --> 00:45:52,020
initially you shouldn't
have to worry about icing,

820
00:45:52,020 --> 00:45:55,200
because it's a phenomenon that
occurs when you're in a cloud.

821
00:45:55,200 --> 00:45:57,840
So you shouldn't be in a
cloud if you're a VFR pilot

822
00:45:57,840 --> 00:45:58,820
to begin with.

823
00:45:58,820 --> 00:46:01,110
So how did you get ice?

824
00:46:01,110 --> 00:46:03,300
The exception might be
freezing rain, if you somehow

825
00:46:03,300 --> 00:46:05,410
drive through freezing rain.

826
00:46:05,410 --> 00:46:08,370
But if you are instrument-rated
and you are going somewhere--

827
00:46:08,370 --> 00:46:12,960
I'm planning on going to New
York next week in the Cirrus.

828
00:46:12,960 --> 00:46:19,350
So if it's cloudy, even if
there's no icing forecast,

829
00:46:19,350 --> 00:46:22,620
I know that there is a risk
of getting ice on the wings.

830
00:46:22,620 --> 00:46:25,885
So in the wintertime,
I just say,

831
00:46:25,885 --> 00:46:28,260
well look, I'm not going to
go unless it's above freezing

832
00:46:28,260 --> 00:46:30,900
on the surface, because,
if I get iced up,

833
00:46:30,900 --> 00:46:36,330
then inadvertently I
need an escape route.

834
00:46:36,330 --> 00:46:40,200
And if it's going to be above
freezing at, say, 3,000 feet,

835
00:46:40,200 --> 00:46:41,340
well, that's fine.

836
00:46:41,340 --> 00:46:43,710
I know that I probably
won't be able to climb

837
00:46:43,710 --> 00:46:48,060
if I get moderate icing, but
I will be able to descend.

838
00:46:48,060 --> 00:46:49,920
Even a brick can descend.

839
00:46:49,920 --> 00:46:53,087
So descend down to 3,000 feet,
and all the ice will melt off.

840
00:46:53,087 --> 00:46:53,920
That would be great.

841
00:46:53,920 --> 00:46:56,780
But if it's below
freezing on the surface,

842
00:46:56,780 --> 00:47:00,610
then it's basically a no-go.

843
00:47:00,610 --> 00:47:02,310
I've definitely had
icing a few times.

844
00:47:02,310 --> 00:47:03,360
And it's pretty scary.

845
00:47:03,360 --> 00:47:09,470
I was out on a day when
with an instrument student.

846
00:47:09,470 --> 00:47:11,270
And it seemed like
a perfect day to go

847
00:47:11,270 --> 00:47:13,700
practice instrument flying.

848
00:47:13,700 --> 00:47:15,530
There was no turbulence.

849
00:47:15,530 --> 00:47:17,840
There was just
clouds everywhere,

850
00:47:17,840 --> 00:47:19,747
about 800 feet of ceiling.

851
00:47:19,747 --> 00:47:21,830
So you could be in the
clouds, do real approaches,

852
00:47:21,830 --> 00:47:25,190
get experience with actual IMC.

853
00:47:25,190 --> 00:47:27,920
And halfway through
the flight, I

854
00:47:27,920 --> 00:47:31,970
started criticizing this guy
for using way too much power.

855
00:47:31,970 --> 00:47:35,990
The power settings were all off.

856
00:47:35,990 --> 00:47:37,142
What are you doing wrong?

857
00:47:37,142 --> 00:47:38,600
And then I looked
out on the wings.

858
00:47:38,600 --> 00:47:40,520
And I saw they were all frosted.

859
00:47:40,520 --> 00:47:42,020
So we descended.

860
00:47:42,020 --> 00:47:46,280
We managed to complete an
ILS approach into Lawrence

861
00:47:46,280 --> 00:47:50,750
and pulled the airplane
into a warm hangar

862
00:47:50,750 --> 00:47:53,640
and got it warmed up.

863
00:47:53,640 --> 00:47:55,790
So actually, as we
were as we were flying,

864
00:47:55,790 --> 00:47:58,480
the FAA issued an
AIRMET for icing,

865
00:47:58,480 --> 00:48:01,370
but the controllers
never told us about it.

866
00:48:01,370 --> 00:48:02,600
All right.

867
00:48:02,600 --> 00:48:04,370
Requirements for
icing formation--

868
00:48:08,040 --> 00:48:12,570
near freezing temperatures,
minus 10 to 0, is the worst.

869
00:48:12,570 --> 00:48:16,080
You have to have a surface
on which the ice can form.

870
00:48:16,080 --> 00:48:18,750
And you have to be invisible
moisture, basically.

871
00:48:18,750 --> 00:48:22,530
So again, if you're flying in
the clear with your VFR pilot

872
00:48:22,530 --> 00:48:25,510
certificate, icing should
not be a factor for you.

873
00:48:30,310 --> 00:48:30,810
Yeah.

874
00:48:30,810 --> 00:48:34,860
So as I said below, go
through a cold cloud

875
00:48:34,860 --> 00:48:37,910
only if you have an escape
route of warm air below.

876
00:48:42,050 --> 00:48:46,550
AUDIENCE: [INAUDIBLE] for
the engine [INAUDIBLE]

877
00:48:46,550 --> 00:48:51,502
as far as getting the icing
in the carburetor [INAUDIBLE]..

878
00:48:51,502 --> 00:48:52,460
PHILIP GREENSPUN: Yeah.

879
00:48:52,460 --> 00:48:55,960
So the question is, what
about icing in the engine?

880
00:48:55,960 --> 00:48:58,810
So you can get carb ice
that we talked about.

881
00:48:58,810 --> 00:49:02,490
You can get carb ice when
it's 50 degrees outside,

882
00:49:02,490 --> 00:49:05,220
as long as it's humid.

883
00:49:05,220 --> 00:49:07,440
So it's slightly unrelated.

884
00:49:07,440 --> 00:49:10,350
The main problem with
engines is that you

885
00:49:10,350 --> 00:49:12,400
can get ice in the induction.

886
00:49:12,400 --> 00:49:15,930
So if the intake for the engine
where it's trying to breathe

887
00:49:15,930 --> 00:49:19,260
gets iced over, then there's
an alternate-- again,

888
00:49:19,260 --> 00:49:21,870
they're relying
on the hero pilot.

889
00:49:21,870 --> 00:49:24,990
Some airplanes actually,
it'll just open automatically,

890
00:49:24,990 --> 00:49:27,870
the vacuum of trying to suck the
air through the intake that's

891
00:49:27,870 --> 00:49:32,180
not working will cause
some backup door to open.

892
00:49:32,180 --> 00:49:33,930
And a lot of--

893
00:49:33,930 --> 00:49:38,310
most IFR-certified aircraft have
an alternate air lever that you

894
00:49:38,310 --> 00:49:44,380
can pull and have air pulled
from somewhere inside the--

895
00:49:44,380 --> 00:49:47,430
it's a little more protected
inside the airframe.

896
00:49:47,430 --> 00:49:49,280
Does that answer your question?

897
00:49:49,280 --> 00:49:49,900
AUDIENCE: Yes.

898
00:49:49,900 --> 00:49:54,290
So I guess you're saying as
long as the heat's working

899
00:49:54,290 --> 00:49:56,723
your [INAUDIBLE].

900
00:49:56,723 --> 00:49:58,390
PHILIP GREENSPUN: As
long as which heat?

901
00:49:58,390 --> 00:50:03,873
AUDIENCE: [INAUDIBLE]

902
00:50:03,873 --> 00:50:05,290
PHILIP GREENSPUN:
You're not going

903
00:50:05,290 --> 00:50:07,660
to get carb icing and airframe
icing at the same time

904
00:50:07,660 --> 00:50:08,230
probably.

905
00:50:08,230 --> 00:50:11,535
I think, at that point,
it's probably too cold.

906
00:50:11,535 --> 00:50:12,410
I'm not I'm not sure.

907
00:50:12,410 --> 00:50:14,530
Well, the other issue is
you're probably not going

908
00:50:14,530 --> 00:50:16,420
to fly a carburated
airplane into the clouds,

909
00:50:16,420 --> 00:50:19,600
because the real IFR airplanes
that people use to travel,

910
00:50:19,600 --> 00:50:23,340
like Cirruses and
Bonanzas and stuff,

911
00:50:23,340 --> 00:50:26,910
in challenging conditions, those
are almost all fuel injected.

912
00:50:26,910 --> 00:50:29,410
But you do have to worry about
induction icing, like I said.

913
00:50:32,310 --> 00:50:32,810
OK.

914
00:50:35,740 --> 00:50:37,640
Icing layers are
usually pretty thin.

915
00:50:37,640 --> 00:50:41,050
So if you're in a jet, you
just add power and climb up

916
00:50:41,050 --> 00:50:44,390
another few thousand feet
and you're out of it.

917
00:50:44,390 --> 00:50:47,560
Again, one of the
effects of icing

918
00:50:47,560 --> 00:50:51,940
is to dramatically reduce
your climb performance.

919
00:50:51,940 --> 00:50:55,030
So this best approach
of climbing out of it

920
00:50:55,030 --> 00:50:56,440
is not always available.

921
00:51:00,380 --> 00:51:05,800
You will end up using more
power on the final approach.

922
00:51:05,800 --> 00:51:09,460
And you'll add speed as
well, because the stall

923
00:51:09,460 --> 00:51:10,480
speed may have gone up.

924
00:51:10,480 --> 00:51:14,530
And you can't really be
sure, since it hasn't

925
00:51:14,530 --> 00:51:18,170
been quantified and tested.

926
00:51:18,170 --> 00:51:20,830
You probably won't use flaps.

927
00:51:20,830 --> 00:51:24,670
And you'll not
make severe turns.

928
00:51:24,670 --> 00:51:28,870
So there's a good NASA video
that I encourage you to watch,

929
00:51:28,870 --> 00:51:34,150
especially as you work on higher
performance aircraft and IFR.

930
00:51:34,150 --> 00:51:37,460
NASA has this great
video about icing.

931
00:51:37,460 --> 00:51:38,410
OK.

932
00:51:38,410 --> 00:51:41,830
How do the transportation
class airplanes handle this?

933
00:51:41,830 --> 00:51:46,990
One approach is to push
antifreeze out onto the wings.

934
00:51:46,990 --> 00:51:48,370
That used to be called TKS.

935
00:51:48,370 --> 00:51:51,040
Now, it's called CAV.

936
00:51:51,040 --> 00:51:52,460
It's just a brand name.

937
00:51:52,460 --> 00:51:55,540
So if you go to a flight school
and you see a modern Cirrus,

938
00:51:55,540 --> 00:51:58,510
like the SR22s, the
leading edges of the wings

939
00:51:58,510 --> 00:51:59,710
will be metal.

940
00:51:59,710 --> 00:52:01,660
And they'll have little
tiny holes in them.

941
00:52:01,660 --> 00:52:05,140
And that's for this
antifreeze to come out.

942
00:52:05,140 --> 00:52:08,650
If you have a very light
jet or a turbo prop,

943
00:52:08,650 --> 00:52:12,250
you may have rubber boots on the
wings and on the tail surfaces.

944
00:52:12,250 --> 00:52:15,310
And those inflate to
crack the ice off.

945
00:52:15,310 --> 00:52:18,190
The jets are really
the ultimate--

946
00:52:18,190 --> 00:52:22,780
the bigger jets
all have bleed air.

947
00:52:22,780 --> 00:52:24,220
Remember, the jets
are compressing

948
00:52:24,220 --> 00:52:27,060
air so much that it becomes
really hot even before it's

949
00:52:27,060 --> 00:52:28,030
burned.

950
00:52:28,030 --> 00:52:30,490
So you pull the bleed
air off the compressor,

951
00:52:30,490 --> 00:52:34,550
and you run it out into the
leading edges of the wings.

952
00:52:34,550 --> 00:52:37,720
And that just melts the ice off.

953
00:52:37,720 --> 00:52:46,150
The transporter aircraft, they
also heat the windshields.

954
00:52:46,150 --> 00:52:47,890
So you'll be able
to see when you do--

955
00:52:47,890 --> 00:52:50,920
if it's not above
freezing at the airport,

956
00:52:50,920 --> 00:52:54,580
you'll have a clear windshield,
so you can leave the runway.

957
00:52:54,580 --> 00:52:58,390
Even in very basic
airplanes like a Cirrus,

958
00:52:58,390 --> 00:53:03,040
if they're IFR-certified,
the pedo tube

959
00:53:03,040 --> 00:53:04,180
is going to be heated.

960
00:53:04,180 --> 00:53:06,740
There will be pedo heat.

961
00:53:06,740 --> 00:53:08,810
OK.

962
00:53:08,810 --> 00:53:11,630
You can learn a whole
bunch more about this.

963
00:53:11,630 --> 00:53:13,310
I think everything
you know to pass

964
00:53:13,310 --> 00:53:15,440
the test is pretty much
in the Pilot's Handbook

965
00:53:15,440 --> 00:53:17,390
of Aeronautical Knowledge.

966
00:53:17,390 --> 00:53:20,120
There's a little bit in the AIM.

967
00:53:20,120 --> 00:53:23,480
If you want to dig deeper
and understand more of it,

968
00:53:23,480 --> 00:53:26,150
then I would encourage you
to look at these FAA weather

969
00:53:26,150 --> 00:53:27,790
publications.

970
00:53:27,790 --> 00:53:31,940
One is about weather theory
and one is about information

971
00:53:31,940 --> 00:53:34,280
that you can get
from various sources.

972
00:53:34,280 --> 00:53:38,450
There's also these videos that I
would encourage you to look at.

973
00:53:38,450 --> 00:53:41,830
One of them is called
"Ambushed by Ice"

974
00:53:41,830 --> 00:53:44,390
and "Into Deep--"
these particular links,

975
00:53:44,390 --> 00:53:47,300
don't write those down, because
I fixed them last night,

976
00:53:47,300 --> 00:53:49,490
but the Dropbox
didn't update yet.

977
00:53:49,490 --> 00:53:52,500
Do they have real-time
weather data?

978
00:53:52,500 --> 00:53:55,700
So the question is, in your
basic trainer airplane,

979
00:53:55,700 --> 00:53:58,770
do they have real-time
weather data?

980
00:53:58,770 --> 00:54:02,300
So let's just talk about
East Coast Aero Club

981
00:54:02,300 --> 00:54:07,010
is a typical higher
end flight school.

982
00:54:07,010 --> 00:54:10,430
About maybe 10 years ago,
almost all the aircraft

983
00:54:10,430 --> 00:54:15,050
had a Garmin IFR-certified
GPS put in, a Garmin 430.

984
00:54:15,050 --> 00:54:18,770
So at that point, you
had a really good GPS.

985
00:54:18,770 --> 00:54:22,700
But they did not have XM weather
pulling data from satellites,

986
00:54:22,700 --> 00:54:25,670
which we'll talk
about in a little bit,

987
00:54:25,670 --> 00:54:30,710
because it's a $500 a year
subscription and a $10,000 box.

988
00:54:30,710 --> 00:54:32,990
So people didn't want to do it.

989
00:54:32,990 --> 00:54:37,220
With ADS-B, the FAA is now
providing some of the same data

990
00:54:37,220 --> 00:54:41,240
that XM was providing
for free, as long

991
00:54:41,240 --> 00:54:44,380
as you have an ADS-B
in transponder.

992
00:54:44,380 --> 00:54:47,720
And the East Coast
Aero-- well, everybody

993
00:54:47,720 --> 00:54:50,780
has to upgrade to ADS-B by 2020.

994
00:54:50,780 --> 00:54:52,940
Not everybody has
to have ADS-B in,

995
00:54:52,940 --> 00:54:54,800
but I think East Coast
Aero Club's probably

996
00:54:54,800 --> 00:54:57,830
fairly typical of the
better flight schools.

997
00:54:57,830 --> 00:55:00,980
They've put-- or they're
gradually putting in a ADS-B

998
00:55:00,980 --> 00:55:03,600
in and out transponders
in all their aircraft.

999
00:55:03,600 --> 00:55:05,487
It won't display in the cockpit.

1000
00:55:05,487 --> 00:55:07,820
You'll have to have your
phone, your iPad, or something.

1001
00:55:07,820 --> 00:55:11,180
But you'll be able to see--

1002
00:55:11,180 --> 00:55:13,460
you'll be able to see
NEXRAD radar picture.

1003
00:55:13,460 --> 00:55:15,110
You'll be able to
get METARs and TAFs.

1004
00:55:15,110 --> 00:55:16,280
You'll get all of that.

1005
00:55:16,280 --> 00:55:16,940
So I think--

1006
00:55:16,940 --> 00:55:20,120
TINA: But if you don't want
to rely on someone else--

1007
00:55:20,120 --> 00:55:21,440
this is MIT.

1008
00:55:21,440 --> 00:55:23,960
You can actually get
that data yourself.

1009
00:55:23,960 --> 00:55:26,810
So when we talk about
weather data today,

1010
00:55:26,810 --> 00:55:28,310
we're going to
also talk about how

1011
00:55:28,310 --> 00:55:34,160
you can do it yourself,
build your own Stratux ADS-B

1012
00:55:34,160 --> 00:55:35,670
receiver.

1013
00:55:35,670 --> 00:55:36,930
And I've actually done this.

1014
00:55:36,930 --> 00:55:38,340
It was really fun to do.

1015
00:55:38,340 --> 00:55:41,210
It's very easy, actually.

1016
00:55:41,210 --> 00:55:45,260
Basically, based on a Raspberry
Pi with a couple of antennas,

1017
00:55:45,260 --> 00:55:48,740
with a little cooling fan, you
can build a little box that

1018
00:55:48,740 --> 00:55:50,750
can receive that weather data.

1019
00:55:50,750 --> 00:55:53,610
And it actually-- the
software is open source.

1020
00:55:53,610 --> 00:55:55,820
And it can sync with
your other tools.

1021
00:55:55,820 --> 00:55:58,280
So I have it synced
with my Foreflight app.

1022
00:55:58,280 --> 00:56:00,490
So when I'm flying,
I plug that in, I

1023
00:56:00,490 --> 00:56:02,030
bring a backup battery for it.

1024
00:56:02,030 --> 00:56:05,420
And it gives me weather data
and some other traffic data.

1025
00:56:05,420 --> 00:56:07,573
And we'll be talking about
that in a couple hours.

1026
00:56:07,573 --> 00:56:09,490
PHILIP GREENSPUN: Yeah,
I should have noticed.

1027
00:56:09,490 --> 00:56:12,560
As Tina said, a lot of
flight school customers

1028
00:56:12,560 --> 00:56:15,650
for the last five years would
bring little battery powered

1029
00:56:15,650 --> 00:56:21,300
boxes and stick them to the
windshield of whatever they're

1030
00:56:21,300 --> 00:56:21,800
flying.

1031
00:56:21,800 --> 00:56:24,920
And they would get a whole
bunch of more modern services.

1032
00:56:24,920 --> 00:56:26,780
I personally don't love that.

1033
00:56:26,780 --> 00:56:28,720
When I started out
in my flying career,

1034
00:56:28,720 --> 00:56:30,470
I had my big flight
bag with all the stuff

1035
00:56:30,470 --> 00:56:32,330
I was going to bring
into the airplane.

1036
00:56:32,330 --> 00:56:34,427
And now, I have the
philosophy that I

1037
00:56:34,427 --> 00:56:36,260
don't want to bring
anything into the CIrrus

1038
00:56:36,260 --> 00:56:37,430
other than a pencil.

1039
00:56:37,430 --> 00:56:41,140
I want everything that I
need to be in the panel.

1040
00:56:41,140 --> 00:56:44,150
But yeah, I definitely think,
in the older airplanes,

1041
00:56:44,150 --> 00:56:45,950
it's become
conventional for people

1042
00:56:45,950 --> 00:56:52,090
to bring some sort of ADS-B
receiver and get that data.