drunkenbeagle
Gang Member
This is not correct amigo. ASOS provides mag wind. I was 99.99 percent sure, but I went and checked.
http://www.nws.noaa.gov/asos/magwind.htm
My mistake. I swear my CFI told me they were in true north

This is not correct amigo. ASOS provides mag wind. I was 99.99 percent sure, but I went and checked.
http://www.nws.noaa.gov/asos/magwind.htm
Flight Watch is probably looking at METARS and Unicom is usually looking at the wind indications, so it should be magnetic.My mistake. I swear my CFI told me they were in true northCurious, how does flight watch or Unicom generally report, since they are probably looking at the Metars (which should also be true for surface observations, correct?)
. A METAR should be magnetic. Too late to look it up but I'm sure people will be all over this.![]()
Until you bend a wing up and 91.13 is pulled out and thrown at you.
I'm pretty sure METARs are always true.
Ever see a headwind/xwind component chart before?
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Printed, yes, but if you hear it over FAA radio, it's magnetic, according to the AIM:
Section 7-1-12, Weather Observing Programs
[...]
Wind direction broadcast over FAA radios is in reference to magnetic north.
A sidebar... something i taught my students when I was instructing years ago. Those x-wind component charts are great for pre-flight, etc. But, if you're actually in the airplane and don't have time to reference the crosswind component chart for whatever reason just use your watch to give you a good idea of what your xwind component is.
ex. you have a 30 degree x-wind @ 30 knots. Take a look at a watch. 30 minutes is half way around the watch so use half of 30= 15 knot crosswind component.
ex. gusting 45 knots and 20 degrees off the nose. 20 minutes on your watch is 1/3 of the way around... 1/3 of 45 is 15 knots. xwind component of 15.
Any greater than 60 degrees just say it's the reported wind.
This is by no means perfect... but it will get you within a few knots of the x-wind component chart in the POH in normal situations. It's also something to keep in mind in an emergency when you need to get on the ground quick and don't have time to reference any chart.
A sidebar... something i taught my students when I was instructing years ago. Those x-wind component charts are great for pre-flight, etc. But, if you're actually in the airplane and don't have time to reference the crosswind component chart for whatever reason just use your watch to give you a good idea of what your xwind component is.
ex. you have a 30 degree x-wind @ 30 knots. Take a look at a watch. 30 minutes is half way around the watch so use half of 30= 15 knot crosswind component.
ex. gusting 45 knots and 20 degrees off the nose. 20 minutes on your watch is 1/3 of the way around... 1/3 of 45 is 15 knots. xwind component of 15.
Any greater than 60 degrees just say it's the reported wind.
This is by no means perfect... but it will get you within a few knots of the x-wind component chart in the POH in normal situations. It's also something to keep in mind in an emergency when you need to get on the ground quick and don't have time to reference any chart.
when it comes to winds, if you see it, it's true, if you hear it, it's not...it's magnetic. I think there may be some obscure exception somewhere, but for the stuff you use most often, this works.
I use the "6 Rules of Thumb"
Wind direction and Heading difference: amount of total wind speed as xwind component
10 degrees: 1/6
20 degrees: 2/6
30 degrees: 3/6
40 degrees: 4/6
50 degrees: 5/6
60 degrees: assume 100%
why not just learn the trig???
Why you start pulling 2 gees at 60 aob 1.4 at 45??
sin of 30 is .5 (square root of 1/2)
sin of 45 is .707 (square root of 2 /2)
sin of 60 is .866 (square root of 3/2)
cos of 30 is .866 (square root of 3/2)
cos of 45 is .707 (square root of 2 /2)
cos of 60 is .5(square root of 1/2)
I just looove trying to explain to CFI know it all that the FAA 1/60 rule is really the sin of 1 degree rule that is an approximation that means nothing after about 5 degrees.
I hear ya brotha. I leave my calculator at home when relaxing around the patch. My comment was directed at fellow airline pilots and those that want to discuss the professional side of aviation. It was specifically not directed at c172 private pilots in the peanut gallery lol. If you have anything other to add besides your ignorance, please opine.Because flying is much more interesting to me... lol
I hear ya brotha. I leave my calculator at home when relaxing around the patch. My comment was directed at fellow airline pilots and those that want to discuss the professional side of aviation. It was specifically not directed at c172 private pilots in the peanut gallery lol. If you have anything other to add besides your ignorance, please opine.