Weather/Meterology Books
Posted: Fri May 09, 2008 12:28 pm
Are there any good southern hemisphere books out there I can read? I have done a search & there are a couple but they are quite expensive. I have the microlighters handbook & thats got some good basic stuff (except their lows are anticlockwise). I am learning the hard way at the moment.
It looks good at 05:30 so I go to the airfield, take off in low/no wind conditions and then find myself all over the place. Weekend before last I ended up looking down at the dams, they were like glass, 7 minutes outbound & 20 minutes back, some of it with high rates of descent at full power. The only clue first thing in the morning was there was no Witbank pollution visible (VERY abnormal in no wind conditions.)
I know its wind shear, & inversion & thermal effects over the dams and believe the trike will stay in one piece, I just want to be able to see it coming.
Are there any good books out there the forum can recommend?
It looks good at 05:30 so I go to the airfield, take off in low/no wind conditions and then find myself all over the place. Weekend before last I ended up looking down at the dams, they were like glass, 7 minutes outbound & 20 minutes back, some of it with high rates of descent at full power. The only clue first thing in the morning was there was no Witbank pollution visible (VERY abnormal in no wind conditions.)
I know its wind shear, & inversion & thermal effects over the dams and believe the trike will stay in one piece, I just want to be able to see it coming.
Are there any good books out there the forum can recommend?