Turbulence in the upper airspace
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Turbulence in the upper airspace
As a PPL. I always feel a little like a fish out of water in a big aeroplane, since the environment is so different to chugging around at 2000ft.
We came back from a family holiday in Mallorca a couple of days ago and the sector took 2h30. Having been to Palma quite a lot, I am aware that this is a long airborne time for the sector.
The flightdeck PA mentioned strong headwinds, a routing via Bordeaux (it was a very smooth flight) and a cruising level of 360 in a 73'.
My question is whether it would be reasonable to expect some mod CAT (we were VMC until well into the descent) given the strong headwinds?
I really don't understand turb at airliner flight levels and am intrigued as to why such a smooth flight happened under the circumstances.
We came back from a family holiday in Mallorca a couple of days ago and the sector took 2h30. Having been to Palma quite a lot, I am aware that this is a long airborne time for the sector.
The flightdeck PA mentioned strong headwinds, a routing via Bordeaux (it was a very smooth flight) and a cruising level of 360 in a 73'.
My question is whether it would be reasonable to expect some mod CAT (we were VMC until well into the descent) given the strong headwinds?
I really don't understand turb at airliner flight levels and am intrigued as to why such a smooth flight happened under the circumstances.
Joined: Oct 1999
Posts: 48
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From: United Kingdom
We came back from a family holiday in Mallorca a couple of days ago and the sector took 2h30. Having been to Palma quite a lot, I am aware that this is a long airborne time for the sector.
As for the turbulence question - a definitive answer is one that the seasoned pro's still seek. It is not unusual to sit in a 150kt jetstream enjoying a smooth ride and later be in a 5kt zephyr having the ride of a lifetime (so to speek
). Ironically, the aircraft following a few minutes behind may well experience the exact opposite.




