Sydney Fog Sunday.
I think the reviews on Seek for these jobs tell you all you need to know about the current quality of Met products...
"Management is terrible. They're far more interested in politics and empire building. The core function of the organisation seems to be completely misunderstood by management as they have more IT staff than any other and those IT staff are generally inexperienced and incompetent, they've created an environment where actual meteorological products that could would be beneficial to the Australian public will never see the light of day."
"Management is terrible. They're far more interested in politics and empire building. The core function of the organisation seems to be completely misunderstood by management as they have more IT staff than any other and those IT staff are generally inexperienced and incompetent, they've created an environment where actual meteorological products that could would be beneficial to the Australian public will never see the light of day."
Thanks for the info about where the forecasters are located. I had been taught and believed that if there was a trend function then there was literally a meteorologist on the ground at that port.
Please tell me you are joking about the ‘working from home’?
I can see the next accident report “ The failure to divert earlier can be traced to the failure to update the forecast which in turn was due to distraction. The primary cause of the distraction being an argument the forecaster was having with their seven year old about how much Nintendo Switch time was appropriate while off school sick.”
BOM forecasts are all done out of a city highrise building in MEL and BNE these days, thats only if the forcaster isn't working from home.
I can see the next accident report “ The failure to divert earlier can be traced to the failure to update the forecast which in turn was due to distraction. The primary cause of the distraction being an argument the forecaster was having with their seven year old about how much Nintendo Switch time was appropriate while off school sick.”
Please tell me you are joking about the ‘working from home’?
I can see the next accident report “ The failure to divert earlier can be traced to the failure to update the forecast which in turn was due to distraction. The primary cause of the distraction being an argument the forecaster was having with their seven year old about how much Nintendo Switch time was appropriate while off school sick.”
I can see the next accident report “ The failure to divert earlier can be traced to the failure to update the forecast which in turn was due to distraction. The primary cause of the distraction being an argument the forecaster was having with their seven year old about how much Nintendo Switch time was appropriate while off school sick.”
AFAIK, met forecaster is the only job in the world where you get paid to be wrong. :-)
Congratulations to the PIC that landed on 16L just as it got to it's worst at 1000 RVR, taxied off the runway at 23kts in the sharp turn, then taxied up behind a waiting Jet that surprised him as it suddenly appeared out of the fog, stopped, pulled out his phone and took a photo so he could quickly put it on social media as soon as the park brake was set. Australian aviators at their finest.
Congratulations to the PIC that landed on 16L just as it got to it's worst at 1000 RVR, taxied off the runway at 23kts in the sharp turn, then taxied up behind a waiting Jet that surprised him as it suddenly appeared out of the fog, stopped, pulled out his phone and took a photo so he could quickly put it on social media as soon as the park brake was set. Australian aviators at their finest.
Yes unfortunately it’s true, as someone who worked with the Sydney MET unit for many years I can tell you their Met knowledge and understanding of the local conditions were light years ahead of what we are suffering with now. They were closed down around the start of COVID, I believe it cost the airlines 2 million a year between them to fund the unit, I can assure you it’s now costed them 10 times more per year now and has to be one of the greatest own goals in aviation! People forget there existence came about because many years ago people realised the a better service was required. Unfortunately the ones who pushed for their closure didn’t have the slightest idea what they did or how import they were. The constant TAF amends with the back dating of actual weather has made the whole point of looking at the forecast a waste of time. I suggest you put on a lot of extra fuel these days!
Yes unfortunately it’s true, as someone who worked with the Sydney MET unit for many years I can tell you their Met knowledge and understanding of the local conditions were light years ahead of what we are suffering with now. They were closed down around the start of COVID, I believe it cost the airlines 2 million a year between them to fund the unit, I can assure you it’s now costed them 10 times more per year now and has to be one of the greatest own goals in aviation! People forget there existence came about because many years ago people realised the a better service was required. Unfortunately the ones who pushed for their closure didn’t have the slightest idea what they did or how import they were. The constant TAF amends with the back dating of actual weather has made the whole point of looking at the forecast a waste of time. I suggest you put on a lot of extra fuel these days!
What’s the formal process for reporting when a TAF is inaccurate? I think as pilots we need to use both the individual company reporting systems in parallel with a reporting system direct to either CASA or the BOM to build data on inaccuracies.
The following users liked this post:
This is so sad. It is the type of decision making happening everywhere thanks to the latest cohort of "smartest guys in the room".
Signing off on risks to obtain "efficiency dividends" in the short term, knowing they will have moved on before the risk is realised (most of the time). It is endemic in what we're once trusted companies and organisations.
Signing off on risks to obtain "efficiency dividends" in the short term, knowing they will have moved on before the risk is realised (most of the time). It is endemic in what we're once trusted companies and organisations.
Occurrence Notification – Aviation
Select Other as the Event Type, and describe all details about the event, including precursors and consequences.
REPCON - voluntary and confidential reporting of aviation safety concerns.
Aviation Self Reporting Scheme
Bureau of Meteorology seeks feedback BoM feedback
Originally Posted by TopBunk
Doesn't SYD have Cat III facilities yet, or is it still stuck in the 1950's?
Originally Posted by DROPS
What? Spend money on something useful? How does that make a profit?
Increased spacing is required for CAT II (and CAT III) approaches so with the same number of aircraft the holding will blow out, press the General Holding button. Airlines favour a higher acceptance rate and then take their chances. The issue was unforecast fog and then the impact on the movement rate, with or without LVP being implemented.
Arrival only spacing Cat II is 10 NM, if there’s a departure to get away it goes to 15NM. Obviously you don’t want to go into Cat II OPS unless it’s really required. In Sydney there’s not too many days a year where it would be needed, and as for CAT III I don’t think it’s ever required.
50% of arrivals probably won't have LVO. How many of them will do an approach to take a look? No idea. Approach ban seems to thin the traffic out in Europe/India where this happens more than once a year.
Yesterday afternoon in SYD was yet again another perfect example this system is broke, went to 25 only at around 1700L for about an hour and a half! Nowhere on any of the hundred TAF amends yesterday was there any indication of a 30kt westerly for an hour or so. Happened smack band in the middle of the evening burst and caused chaos! Funny enough the TAF amends went silent for a couple of hours, not even a speci!