Aero-Tips!
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Aero-Tips 11.09.06
Freezing rain. Sleet. Ice pellets. All may be encountered when
surface air temperatures plunge below freezing. All are extremely
hazardous to aircraft.
Freezing Rain
Freezing rain occurs when air near the surface is below
freezing, while air slightly higher is above freezing. This
temperature inversion, if moist enough, can generate rain that
falls as liquid from clouds in the warm air atop the inversion. As
rain falls into freezing air it rapidly cools, enough that when it
hits a surface that has a skin temperature below freezing (such as
the surface, or an airplane) the droplet spreads on the cold
surface and flash-freezes. A huge accumulation of heavy,
aerodynamics-altering clear ice coats the surface (or the
airplane). The rate of accumulation can be phenomenal. Best
practice is simply to avoid flight in areas of reported or forecast
freezing rain -- with extremely rare exceptions even "known ice"
airplanes are not certified for flight in freezing rain.
Going up
If freezing rain results from a temperature inversion, it's
logical that an escape path from unexpected freezing rain is to
climb, if the airplane retains climb capability. Don't count on it,
but if the airplane will climb get into warmer air at the very
first sign of ice accumulation.
Going down
If the band of below-freezing temperatures is only a few hundred
feet high above the surface, precipitation will likely remain as
freezing rain all the way to the ground. If the freezing band is
more than a few hundred feet thick, however, falling precipitation
will eventually freeze into tiny chunks of ice even if it doesn't
contact a surface. The result is sleet or, in aviation-speak, ice
pellets. The presence (or forecast) of sleet or ice pellets implies
that freezing rain exists only a few hundred feet higher up.
Consequently it's wise to avoid flight in areas of reported or
forecast sleet or ice pellets to avoid flying in dangerous freezing
rain. Encounter ice pellets or sleet in flight and you should not
attempt to climb out of it, because you'll enter the band of
hazardous freezing rain before you can get to above-freezing
air.
The figure shows the basic relationship between rain, freezing
rain and ice pellets, and how they can form in cold fronts and warm
fronts if the temperature on the "cold side" is below freezing.
Aero-tip of the day: Avoid flight near areas of
reported or forecast freezing rain, sleet or ice pellets.