How to Fly Through a Thunderstorm and Just Possibly Survive ~ Doug Daniel
A very senior pilot was asked, "How might I fly through a
thunderstorm that I could not avoid?"
The answer he wanted to give was either, "You can't." or "Don't
try."
But the question needed to be answered. Here is his advice:
Just about the only way to inadvertently get into a thunderstorm
is by flying instruments in clouds with embedded thunderstorms
and without either weather radar equipment onboard or
ground-based weather radar available to your air traffic
controller. Let's assume this is how Fate dealt you such a poor
hand.
The greatest risk in thunderstorms is structural failure. My
advice is: don't do anything that helps the thunderstorm break
your airplane. When you realize that you are in trouble, slow
down. I mean not just to maneuvering speed but much slower than
that. Slow to what is known as 'slow cruise' - the speed that you
use in holding patterns. This will be fairly close to the best
rate of climb airspeed for your airplane. Slow cruise is slow
enough to minimize the adverse effects of turbulence and fast
enough to keep your controls responsive. Consider putting your
wheels down. This will help you stay slow. Most airplanes are not
as strong with flaps out, so don't use flaps unless there is no
restriction against it in your pilot's handbook for the
airplane.
The reason to slow down is that the higher your airspeed, the
greater force turbulence can impart on your airplane. That
destructive force comes in the form of lift. Remember that lift
is proportional to the speed of the airplane squared. Slow is
good.
Too slow is not good simply because the last thing that you need
is to stall and spin when you are in a thunderstorm.
There is an expression in aviation that says a pilot's priorities
are aviate, navigate and communicate, in that order. I agree.
Certainly your most important task is to fly the airplane.
However, you need all the help you can get. So tell air traffic
control (ATC) that you are in trouble and need help. Ask them to
vector you out of the thunderstorm. Tell them that you cannot
maintain the assigned altitude - because you cannot. Ask them to
vector you away from high terrain. Be aware that your inability
to maintain altitude can easily put you in a position where you
cannot communicate with ATC for some period of time.
The intensity of rain in a thunderstorm can be truly phenomenal.
Quite possibly your engine or engines can start to ingest a great
deal of water. This water can turn to ice in your carburetor
especially at high altitudes and low power settings. When you
apply carburetor heat, the mixture enriches forcing you to lean
the engine or risk fouling the spark plugs. Tuning the engine is
an integral part of flying the airplane, your most important
task.
The updrafts and downdrafts in a thunderstorm can far exceed a
general aviation airplane's ability to climb or dive. So just
ride them out. Don't start building airspeed by pushing your nose
down to stay at your assigned altitude in a strong updraft. If
you get caught in a strong downdraft, go to your best rate of
climb airspeed at full power. You will still go down - just not
as fast and not so far. When the downdraft dissipates, you can
start climbing back to your assigned altitude. If you have oxygen
and perhaps if you don't, ask ATC for a higher altitude so you
will have a greater margin of safety when you enter your next
overpowering downdraft. If ATC will not grant you a higher
altitude, do not be afraid to declare an emergency and tell ATC
that you are going to a higher altitude.
There are two things that you should remember here. First, if the
FAA issues a violation, it is better to argue in court that you
needed that higher altitude than it is to have the surviving
members of your family argue in court that the FAA should have
cleared you to a higher altitude. Second, when you go high
without oxygen, you get so stupid you don't know how truly stupid
you are. Having said that, when you are at 10,000 feet facing
12,000 feet peaks and a known thunderstorm behind you, the
options start to narrow. For me, it is better to face hypoxia
than certain death.
To sum it up: Plan your fight and check your weather well enough
to know that you are not going into a thunderstorm.
If, by some fluke of nature, you end up in a thunderstorm that
was not predicted and you could not see, then
1.) Slow down.
2.) Remember that flying the airplane is your most important
task.
3.) Get out of the thunderstorm as quickly as possible.
4.) Keep going straight with wings level while you ride out
overpowering up and downdrafts.
5.) Tell ATC.
6.) Ask for help.
Article Source: http://www.articlesnatch.com
About the Author: Doug Daniel a is long time pilot, flight instructor, software engineering manager and author. His department developed the software for the out-the-window-displays for the space shuttle, F-117, RS-71 and numerous other exotic airplanes. His writing focuses on flying techniques designed to make flying easier and safer. If this was interesting, visit his website at http://www.FlyingSecretsRevealed.com/flying_questions/
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