Melburnian1
Veteran Member
- Joined
- Jun 7, 2013
- Posts
- 25,483
As the BOM predicted, this afternoon and early evening at MEL has been very windy. Since 1500, northnortheast or for most of the time north wind speeds have ranged from 50 kilometres an hour to 70, with gusts of up to 89, now reducing to 62kmh.
Aircraft are built to counter huge stresses and to operate in many and varied weather conditions.
Delays to inbound flights are typically 20 to 40 minutes with lots of go arounds to the east of Mansfield and a little to the east of Bendigo. Some flights are later, particularly if they did not depart their origin airport on time. MEL is on single runway operation.
Notwithstanding the skill of commercial pilots and the huge amount of testing that all planes go through prior to acceptance to ensure that they can cope in many weather conditions, is there a continuing wind speed, gust or perceived risk of 'wind shear' at which the controllers in the MEL tower might decide to order inbound flights to be diverted and departing flights to be held on the ground?
Aircraft are built to counter huge stresses and to operate in many and varied weather conditions.
Delays to inbound flights are typically 20 to 40 minutes with lots of go arounds to the east of Mansfield and a little to the east of Bendigo. Some flights are later, particularly if they did not depart their origin airport on time. MEL is on single runway operation.
Notwithstanding the skill of commercial pilots and the huge amount of testing that all planes go through prior to acceptance to ensure that they can cope in many weather conditions, is there a continuing wind speed, gust or perceived risk of 'wind shear' at which the controllers in the MEL tower might decide to order inbound flights to be diverted and departing flights to be held on the ground?