AIRMETS / SIGMETS Pr

AIRMETs and SIGMETs

The big scary warnings of when not to fly!  If you remember almost nothing from this TOPIC, then just REMEMBER these two things:

  • AIRMETS are bad news for little GA airplanes and you should avoid flying in or near an area covered by an AIRMET
  • SIGMETS are very bad news for any airplane including big heavy airliners (this means stay the heck away in your 172!)

AIRMETS – Airmen’s Meteorological Information

AIRMETs (abbreviated WAs) are reports issued that define an area of bad weather for smaller GA airplanes. This weather can still be hazardous to larger jet aircraft, but is specifically directed at GA pilots.  AIRMETs are issued every 6 hours with intermediate updates as needed. AIRMETs come in three flavors:

AIRMET Sierra:

This is a warning for low visibility conditions (IFR conditions) and mountain obscuration (ceilings less than 1,000′ agl and/or visibility less than 3sm).  Remember this diagram below to help you remember AIRMET Sierra (think Sierra Mist Soda, it’s misty and you can’t see!)

goat in clouds

AIRMET Tango:

Tango is for turbulence.  The national weather center will issue an AIRMET Tango anytime they are forecasting turbulence, strong surface winds, or low-level windshear.  The specific criteria are: sustained surface winds of 30 knots or greater, moderate or greater turbulence, or forecast LLWS. Ask Casey what happens when you fly through an area that looks like nice weather, but there is an AIRMET Tango out warning of Moderate Turbulence…. (think t=tango=turbulence)

PIREP

NTSB Case Study:

During a cross-country flight under instrument flight rules (IFR) the pilot was cleared from 9,000ft to 7,000ft over mountainous terrain. In the descent, the pilot reported encountering instrument meteorological conditions (IMC) and extreme turbulence which caused a loss of control resulting in inverted flight. The pilot was able to recover from the loss of control, but was unable to recall how he recovered.

According to information obtained from a Safety Board meteorology specialist, weather data displayed a band of clouds in the immediate vicinity of the upset location associated with mountain wave activity and locally generated turbulence. Another aircraft in the immediate vicinity also reported an encounter of moderate-to-severe turbulence prior to the event. There were no AIRMETs or SIGMETs in effect in the area where the turbulence was encountered.

During a post-flight inspection, both wings were substantially damaged after wrinkling and tearing was found.

PILOT: 415 Hours Total Time, 12 Hours last 30 days, 210 Hours in that make and model.

piper wing metal torn

AIRMET Zulu:

Okay, I don’t have a good mnemonic for you here, but the process of elimination and using T=Turbulence and Sierra Mist=IFR should help.

AIRMET Zulu is going to be issued for icing conditions and to denote the freezing level.  Unless you are a highly experienced pilot with an aircraft certified to fly into icing conditions, I wouldn’t dream of going flying on a day that they have issued an AIRMET Zulu for my area.  Remember you don’t have to rely on an AIRMET Zulu being published to know what the freezing level is.  You can check that on the freezing level chart that we will talk more about in our Instrument Rating course.

icing airmet zulu
Just play flight simulator today instead….

SIGMETS – Significant Meteorological Information

SIGMETs (abbreviated WSs) are notices issued for non-convective weather that is potentially hazardous to all aircraft.  SIGMETs are unscheduled forecasts that are valid for 4 hours unless the SIGMET relates to a hurricane, in which case it is valid for 6 hours. They are issued to report severe weather such as:

  • Severe icing not associated with thunderstorms
  • Severe or extreme turbulence or clear air turbulence (CAT) not associated with thunderstorms
  • Dust storms or sandstorms that lower surface or in-flight visibilities to below three miles
  • Volcanic ash
sigmet duststorm
Ya, they issue SIGMETs for things like this….

Convective SIGMET

A Convective SIGMET (WST) is an in-flight weather advisory issued for hazardous convective weather that affects the safety of every flight. They are issued at 55 minutes past the hour but can be issued any time in the interim as needed.  They are valid for 2 hours.  Convective SIGMETS are issued for three zones, Eastern, Central, and Western United States.  Even if no severe weather is forecast, a SIGMET will still be issued, it will simply read: “CONVECTIVE SIGMET…NONE”.

Convective SIGMETs are issued for:

  • Severe thunderstorms with surface winds greater than 50 knots
  • Hail at the surface greater than or equal to ¾ inch in diameter
  • Tornadoes
  • Embedded thunderstorms, lines of thunderstorms, or thunderstorms with heavy or greater precipitation that affect 40 percent or more of a 3,000 square mile or greater region
convective sigmet lightning storm
I mean, would you want to fly any sort of airplane in that?

Decoding

Yes, of course, AIRMETs and SIGMETs are issued in coded forms as with all aviation weather.  This is to prevent super secret weather forecasts from falling into the hands of our enemies (helicopter pilots).  All jokes aside, the coding is done for a reason, and it’s up to us as pilots to be able to decode these textual weather forecasts.  If you have questions when looking at AIRMETs or SIGMETs, simply call up 1800-WX-BRIEF and talk to your friendly local flight briefer.  They have access to all fancy FAA manuals known to man!  If you want to check out some of those FAA manuals, you can download from our site under the PILOT RESOURCES tab. (you must be a Flight Engineer subscriber or higher).

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