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I was under the impression that the indicated airspeed would drop. This scenario is similar to a headwind (upwind leg) shearing to a tailwind (downwind leg) which causes a drop in indicated airspeed.
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i think this what the original poster was referring to, now that the situation was clarified. the reason that you won't lose any IAS as you make the turn is because the turn isn't abrupt. if you make a 180* turn, it takes, what...20 seconds? more? maybe a bit less? at any rate, quite a bit of time. to get a change in IAS from shear, the change is instantaneous, hence the airplane's reaction. think back to when you had to practice S-turns and turns around a point for PPL certification.....maneuvers done with turning downwind->upwind all done at a constant airspeed. your groundspeed changes, but not your airspeed.