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Some Unpredictable Winter Scud
Unpredictable Winter Scud
Extreme Rate of Change
| Clouds: | |
| Layer 1 Height: 2,500ft. to 5,000ft. Type: Cumulus Cverage: 8/8 Overcast Turbulence: Light Icing: None Precipitation: None | Layer 2 Height: 7,000ft. to 12,000ft. Type: Cumulus Coverage: 8/8 Overcast Turbulence: Moderate Icing: Trace Precipitation: None |
| Layer 3 Height: Type: Coverage: Turbulence: Icing: Precipitation: | Layer 4 Height: Type: Coverage: Turbulence: Icing: Precipitation: |
| Wind: | Temp/Pressure |
| Direction: 175 Degrees Speed: 15 knots Gusts: 17 knots Turbulence: None Shear: None Height: 0ft. to 1,500ft. | Temperature: 54 Degrees F Dew Point: 53 Degrees F Pressure: 29.72 |
| Visibility: | |
| Height: 2,500ft. to 12,000ft. | Visibility: 50 miles |
| Description: Should you go VFR or IFR? Over or under? Should you scud run? To make the 54 degrees F practical, set your season to winter. There is a slightly layered overcast above (Trust me, the gap isn't that clear) Some low but scattered stratus are forming. It looks bad, but I've used it a lot, and I never know what it's going to do. A lot of it depends on loction. In some places that tend to get weather like this, it got bad, but in some other places that usually don't get this, it just broke up. If you set your slider to extreme rate of change, it's fun to see what it does. I've used it plenty of times and I like it, so I thought I'd let you try it, too. | |
Latest page update: made by 1tiger9
, Mar 8 2008, 4:16 PM EST
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Edited by 1tiger9
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