Title: Boeing Field
1Boeing Field
2Downbursts can be Divided into Two Main Types
- MACROBURST A large downburst with its outburst
winds extending greater than 2.5 miles horizontal
dimension. Damaging winds, lasting 5 to 30
minutes, could be as high as 134 mph. - MICROBURST A small downburst with its outburst,
damaging winds extending 2.5 miles or less. In
spite of its small horizontal scale, an intense
microburst could induce damaging winds as high as
168 mph.
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4Research by NCAR and collaborators in the 1980s
uncovered the deadly one-two punch of
microbursts aircraft level off when they
encounter headwinds, then find themselves pushed
to the ground by intense downdrafts and tailwinds.
5Downbursts most dangerous to aviation
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11 12Downburst Video
- http//www.youtube.com/watch?vTkavH9aZue8
- http//video.google.com/videoplay?docid5318526465
028252338 - http//www.youtube.com/watch?vK8ilNyf5p-M
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15- The following are some fatal crashes that have
been attributed to windshear/ microbursts in the
vicinity of airports - Eastern Airlines Flight 66
- Pan Am Flight 759
- Delta Airlines Flight 191
- USAir Flight 1016
16Eastern Air Lines 66 June 24, 1975 New York
Kennedy Airport 112 killed 12 injured Crashed
while landing Boeing 727
17Pan Am 759 July 9, 1982 New Orleans Airport 145
passenger/crew killed 8 on ground killed Crashed
after takeoff Boeing 727
18Flight trajectory (red line), winds (green
arrows), and indicated airspeed of PAA 759
19Delta 191
August 2, 1985
Dallas-Fort Worth Airport
Crashed on landing
8 of 11 crew members and 128 of the 152
passengers killed, 1 person on ground killed
Lockheed L-1011
20USAir 1016 July 2, 1994 Charlotte/Douglas
Airport Crashed on landing 37 killed 25
injured McDonnell Douglas DC-9
21Downbursts
Microburst
Dry Microburst
- Damaging winds less than 2.5 miles in diameter
- Accompanied by little or no rainfall
Wet Microburst
- Damaging winds less than 2.5 miles in diameter
- Accompanied by very heavy rainfall and perhaps
hail
22August 1, 1983 the strongest microburst recorded
at an airport was observed at Andrews Air Force
Base in Washington DC. The wind speeds may have
exceeded 150 mph in this microburst. The peak
gust was recorded at 211 PM 7 minutes after
Air Force One, with the President on board,
landed on the same runway.
23During take-offs the pilot experiences a headwind
and increased aircraft performance followed by a
short period of decreased headwind a downdraft
and finally a strong tailwind
24During landings the airplane begins the descent
flying into a strong headwind a downdraft and
finally a strong tailwind represents the extreme
situation just prior to impact
25Macroburst
Wisconsin on the 4th of July, 1977, with winds
that were estimated to exceed 115 mph, and
completely flattening thousands of acres of
forest
Microburst
26The Terminal Doppler Weather Radar (TDWR) is now
deployed at 44 major airports. The TDWR mission
is to provide wind shear detection services to
air traffic controllers and supervisors
27Low Level Windshear Alert System (LLWAS)
28LLWAS
- In 1983, the FAA asked NCAR to develop a version
of LLWAS that could detect microbursts. Between
1983 and 1988, NCAR developed and tested a new
LLWAS system, called enhanced LLWAS or
LLWAS-Network Expansion that detected
microbursts, determined the strength in terms of
headwind/tailwind gains or losses (in knots) and
located the event (on the runway, at 1, 2, or 3
nm on departure or arrival). The system was
designed to provide alerts specific to each
runway operation. It was designed to have a
probability of detection of 90 percent or greater
and a false alarm rate of 10 percent or less. - This system was later improved and is now called
the Phase-3 LLWAS. A typical Phase-3 LLWAS will
have enough sensors to be spaced 2-km apart (1
nm apart) and cover out to 2 nm from the end of
each major runway. The largest LLWAS is at Denver
International Airport. It has 32 wind sensors.
Most Phase-3 systems have between 12 and 16 wind
sensors. A siting evaluation is done for each
airport to determine the network geometry since
it depends on terrain, of runways,
obstructions, etc.
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30 Microburst Season Time
- The four best known downburst aviation disasters
in the U.S. happened in the summer. - (1 in June, 2 in July, 1 in August)
- All four happened in the late afternoon or early
evening (from 405 to 743 local time)
31Still not There
- The threat of wind shear has been reduced but not
eliminated. It was mentioned in an average of 25
National Transportation Safety Board accident and
incident reports a year from 1983 through 2001.
But the vast majority of cases were nonfatal and
mostly involved general aviation.