EFFECT OF WIND
The preceding discussion explained how to measure a true course on the
aeronautical chart and how to make corrections for variation and deviation, but
one important factor has not been considered—wind. As discussed in the study of
the atmosphere, wind is a mass of air moving over the surface of the Earth in a
definite direction. When the wind is blowing from the north at 25 knots, it
simply means that air is moving southward over the Earth’s surface at the rate
of 25 NM in 1 hour. Under these conditions, any inert object free from
contact with the Earth will be carried 25 NM southward in 1 hour. This effect
becomes apparent when clouds, dust, toy balloons, etc., are observed being blown
along by the wind. Obviously, an airplane flying within the moving mass of air
will be similarly affected. Even though the airplane does not float freely with
the wind, it moves through the air at the same time the air is moving over the
ground, thus is affected by wind. Consequently, at the end of 1 hour of flight,
the airplane will be in a position which results from a combination of these two
motions:
• the movement of the air mass in reference to the ground, and • the
forward movement of the airplane through the air mass.
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Actually, these two motions are independent. So far as the airplane’s
flight through the air is concerned, it makes no difference whether the
mass of air though which the airplane is flying is moving or is
stationary. A pilot flying in a 70-knot gale would be totally unaware of
any wind (except for possible turbulence) unless the ground were observed.
In reference to the ground, however, the airplane would appear to fly
faster with a tailwind or slower with a headwind, or to drift right or
left with a crosswind.
As shown in figure 8-12, an airplane flying eastward at an airspeed of
120 knots in calm wind, will have a groundspeed exactly the same—120
knots. If the mass of air is moving eastward at 20 knots, the airspeed of
the airplane will not be affected, but the progress of the airplane over
the ground will be 120 plus 20, or a groundspeed of 140 knots. On the
other hand, if the mass of air is moving westward at 20 knots, the
airspeed of the airplane still remains the same, but groundspeed becomes
120 minus 20 or 100 knots. |
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Assuming no correction is made for wind effect, if the airplane is
heading eastward at 120 knots, and the air mass moving southward at 20
knots, the airplane at the end of 1 hour will be 120 miles east of its
point of departure because of its progress through the air. It will be 20
miles south because of the motion of the air. Under these circumstances,
the airspeed remains 120 knots, but the groundspeed is determined by
combining the movement of the airplane with that of the air
mass.Groundspeed can be measured as the distance from the point of
departure to the position of the airplane at the end of 1
hour. |
Figure 8-12.—Motion of the air affects the speed with which
airplanes move over the Earth's surface. Airspeed, the rate at which an
airplane moves through the air, is not affected by air motion. |
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The groundspeed can be computed by the time required to
fly between two points a known distance apart. It also can be determined
before flight by constructing a wind triangle, which will be explained
later in this chapter. [Figure 8-13] |
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Figure 8-13.—Airplane flightpath resulting from its airspeed and
direction, and the windspeed and direction. |
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The direction in which the plane is pointing as it flies is heading.
Its actual path over the ground, which is a combination of the motion of
the airplane and the motion of the air, is track. The angle between the
heading and the track is drift angle. If the airplane’s heading coincides
with the true course and the wind is blowing from the left, the track will
not coincide with the true course. The wind will drift the airplane to the
right, so the track will fall to the right of the desired course or true
course. [Figure 8-14] |
Figure 8-14.—Effects of wind drift on maintaining desired
course. |
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By determining the amount of drift, the pilot can
counteract the effect of the wind and make the track of the airplane
coincide with the desired course. If the mass of air is moving across the
course from the left, the airplane will drift to the right, and a
correction must be made by heading the airplane sufficiently to the left
to offset this drift. To state in another way, if the wind is from the
left, the correction will be made by pointing the airplane to the left a
certain number of degrees, therefore correcting for wind drift. This is
wind correction angle and is expressed in terms of degrees right or left
of the true course. [Figure 8-15] |
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Figure 8-15.—Establishing a wind correction angle that will
counteract wind drift and maintain the desired
course. |
To summarize:
• COURSE— is the intended path of an aircraft over the Earth; or the
direction of a line drawn on a chart representing the intended aircraft path,
expressed as the angle measured from a specific reference datum clockwise from
0° through 360° to the line. • HEADING— is the direction in which the nose
of the airplane points during flight. • TRACK—is the actual path made over
the ground in flight. (If proper correction has been made for the wind, track
and course will be identical.) • DRIFT ANGLE—is the angle between heading
and track. • WIND CORRECTION ANGLE—is correction applied to the course to
establish a heading so that track will coincide with course. • AIRSPEED—is
the rate of the airplane’s progress through the air. • GROUNDSPEED—is the
rate of the airplane’s in-flight progress over the ground.
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