1 / 20

Writing Better Aviation AFDs (or) Do you know who your customer really is ?

Writing Better Aviation AFDs (or) Do you know who your customer really is ?. National Weather Service, Jackson, KY. Dustin Harbage And Brian Schoettmer. Why an aviation discussion?.

feoras
Download Presentation

Writing Better Aviation AFDs (or) Do you know who your customer really is ?

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Writing Better Aviation AFDs (or)Do you know who your customer really is? National Weather Service, Jackson, KY Dustin Harbage And Brian Schoettmer

  2. Why an aviation discussion? • The Aviation Forecast Discussion is designed to impart a forecaster’s reasoning for a given aviation forecast, thereby allowing users insight into a forecaster’s thought process. • This may allow the customer to become more informed and aware of the environment.

  3. …Continued… • If a user can understand how a forecaster arrived at a forecast, and the thought process associated with it, then it could promote a higher level of confidence in the predicted weather conditions.

  4. Who is the customer? • General aviation pilots. • Pilots of small corporations. • Dispatchers for large corporations and commercial airlines. • Meteorologists for major airlines. • Flight Service Specialists • Air Traffic Controllers • Coordinators for special air show events. • Military aircrews. • Etc.

  5. The goal of this presentation is to help WFO forecasters better understand the types of information that an aviation customer needs to know. • Sometimes an aviation customer may not understand the information that is being presented to them. • Our job is to serve the aviation community, including pilots, with the best information possible.

  6. The Problem • Is there too much model discussion and wordage that may not make sense to a pilot with minimal meteorology training? • Do we use non-standard contractions and acronyms too much?

  7. What does a general pilot know about weather? • Pilots are only required to know the basics about meteorology to pass their written tests. -Fronts and associated weather -Surface observations -Maps and associated weather -METAR & TAF interpretation

  8. …Continued… • Obviously, some pilots know more about weather than the basics, but we have to assume that the people using our products only know what they are required to learn in training. • Does a pilot know that CDFNT means cold front, or FROPA means frontal passage? • Is an ordinary person going to understand the terms isentropic lift or vorticity?

  9. Is there a solution? • If the forecast narrative uses complex meteorological terms…how about re-writing in simple terms for the aviation discussion? • Is it really more difficult to write out the word cold front or frontal passage?

  10. …Continued… • Is there an easier way to tell pilots about increasing cloud cover other than using isentropic lift as the culprit? • Be sure to use the FAA’s list of approved abbreviations.

  11. What is a pilot looking for? • The first thing a pilot wants to know is, will the forecast be VFR, MVFR, IFR or less? • Can they legally fly that day; or is the weather beyond their capabilities and/or training? • Is there any threat for thunderstorms? • What is the threat for turbulence, shear or icing? • Is there going to be any sort of frontal activity? • Visibility, ceilings, and winds pertinent to the primary runway.

  12. Don’t Focus on the wrong details • An Aviation Forecast Discussion is designed for the aviation community. • There is no need to include information that is not going to be useful to the people the product is designed for. • Keep it simple and to the point; usually 8 lines or less.

  13. Different AFD’s…Different airports. • An AFD should be worded different for an airport that has different types of air traffic. • For instance, a large international airport with lots of air traffic is more interested in weather that will be best for optimum arrival/departure rates.

  14. …Continued.. • The same holds true when you flip it around. A general aviation pilot is more interested in VFR conditions at traffic pattern altitude. • The bottom line…different airports are used for different purposes with regard to types of aircraft. They are going to require different types of information, respectively.

  15. For example… • A 20 knot crosswind is not going to affect a large airliner very much…however a small single engine airplane may not be able to handle the wind at all. • Basically, there are certain weather conditions that have the ability to shut down a small airport, while the same conditions may only reduce a larger airport’s maximum number of arrivals.

  16. Summary • Understanding the customer of the AFD will help the forecaster create a better product. • Know your customer’s background in weather. - Is your customer a general aviation pilot with only the basic weather training? - Is your customer a large airline with dispatchers who know more about weather?

  17. …Continued… • Also, know the type of airport you are forecasting for. - Is the airport smaller and mainly for general aviation? - Is this a large airport full of commercial traffic? • Different types of forecast discussions will be needed for different types of air traffic.

  18. Finally • Keep it simple and to the point. • Don’t use unnecessarily complex meteorological terms for people who won’t understand them. -This is a waste of time and of a product because the customer won’t benefit if they can’t understand the terminology.

  19. Acknowledgements • Ken Widelski National Weather Service Lubbock, TX Aviation AFD Guidance: An Airline Perspective

  20. The End… Thank you Questions, Comments, Concerns… Feel free to e-mail Dustin.Harbage@noaa.gov Or Brian.Schoettmer@noaa.gov

More Related