falconvalley
Absentee Dad of the OOTSK, Runner, Cat Frustrator
Well it's that time of year again! I love saying that now. For as long as I can remember, Milwaukee hadn't had really any type of airshow to speak of. Once in a while, we'd get either the Thunderbirds or Blue Angels, but it was usually a shortened cameo from another show. I think the first official show here was in 2004. It is now called the Milwaukee Air and Water Show.
There's a forecast for some clouds in Milwaukee today and I was curious about the limits for ceiling and visibility for the different versions of the T-Birds show. I didn't notice anything posted here in the recent past, so I figured I'd post the limitations for anyone who's interested.
The visibility limit for a "Flat Show" is 5 nautical miles and the ceiling must be at least 1500 ft. It sounds like they would do some fly-by's but not much else and definitely nothing aerobatic. The limit for a "Low Show" is 3500 ft ceiling. They would do some basic aerobatics but no performance climbing maneuvers. The limit for a "High Show" is 8000 ft ceiling. That's what I'm hoping for! Right now the forecast is broken at 3500 ft. Keeping my fingers crossed.
I found this info at:
http://www.geocities.com/tbirddmnd/Thunderbirds-FAQ.html
There's a forecast for some clouds in Milwaukee today and I was curious about the limits for ceiling and visibility for the different versions of the T-Birds show. I didn't notice anything posted here in the recent past, so I figured I'd post the limitations for anyone who's interested.
The visibility limit for a "Flat Show" is 5 nautical miles and the ceiling must be at least 1500 ft. It sounds like they would do some fly-by's but not much else and definitely nothing aerobatic. The limit for a "Low Show" is 3500 ft ceiling. They would do some basic aerobatics but no performance climbing maneuvers. The limit for a "High Show" is 8000 ft ceiling. That's what I'm hoping for! Right now the forecast is broken at 3500 ft. Keeping my fingers crossed.
I found this info at:
http://www.geocities.com/tbirddmnd/Thunderbirds-FAQ.html