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Another Geosystems Inquiry, Help Greatly Appreciated
"In flying in cloudy conditions, the instrumentation tells me that the clouds extend up too high to get above and down too low to safely get below. The ice buildup on the wings is beginning to adversely affect the nandling of the plane, and I want to shed some of the ice. should I ascend or decend"?
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No best answer has yet been selected by Bhowdy44. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Jake's confidence is appreciated but misplaced in this instance... Problem is there's no "instrumentation" that can tell that the clouds... etc. Secondly, if we knew the weather conditions that are producing the clouds (type of fronts) we could then determine if we should climb or descend. Lacking any further information my best guess is the pilot should bend over and kiss his rear a solemn goodbye... because, in a short while he'll just be along for the ride...
JTP is on the right track about the adiabatic rate (it is 2.7 degrees C per 1,000 feet in dry air) but the problem is one would have to raise the temperature significantly above freezing to get any immediate relief.
High speed fighter aircraft could conceivably fly fast enough to compress the air sufficiently on the leading edges of the wings and tail to melt any ice accumulation... but that would be very fast indeed, although less than the speed of sound...
JTP is on the right track about the adiabatic rate (it is 2.7 degrees C per 1,000 feet in dry air) but the problem is one would have to raise the temperature significantly above freezing to get any immediate relief.
High speed fighter aircraft could conceivably fly fast enough to compress the air sufficiently on the leading edges of the wings and tail to melt any ice accumulation... but that would be very fast indeed, although less than the speed of sound...
Why isn't 'retreat' listed as an option? Don't tell me these conditions were present where and when you took off? Decent isn't an option . . . it's an inevitability.
http://www.aopa.org/asf/publications/sa11.pdf
http://www.aopa.org/asf/publications/sa11.pdf
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