Charlie has great advice here. We could probably cut the IVP
accident rate by 40% if we just stayed out of thunderstorms and towering Cu.
You are NOT going to fly over these monsters. Not in a IVP-not ever. So your
options are to use your nexrad to plot an end around the lines that develop
in the summer or stay below the bases and avoid the rain shafts.
You should not be using NEXRAD to fly between cells that you cannot
visually see. You have to be VFR to stay safe when operating close to these
things. Some of them are moving at over 60 knots. So if you have a time lag
of up to 10 minutes the cell may be ten miles away from where it is depicted
or more. As Charlie said, the NEXRAD tells you the direction of movement,
which is very important in your decision making. Stay upwind of these things
or plan a very wide excursion if you have to go on the downwind side.
Descisions to go between cells in a line should not be taken
lightly. Can you see all the way through the break to blue sky on the other
side? How wide is the break between cells? Is the break opening or closing?
How can you tell? What are the tops of the cu in the break? What
is on the other side? Another cell? Is there any lightning close? What is
you escape route if you poke your nose in it and it closes up?
I fly with WSI on my Chelton and XM on my Garmin 396 (belt and
suspenders). There are differences between the two nexrad images that
are important. One may be painting orange while the other is green. I choose
the most conservative route of the tow shown.
If you are planning on a trip outside the continental U.S. say Canada
or Alaska or the Bahamas-- the coverage does not extend very far outside of
CONUS. Two Lancairs found that out the hard way--both fatal, one this
year.
I was on the other side of the storm that Tom Brady flew into. I landed
in St. Louis twenty minutes before he went down. Ten to fifteen minutes
after I landed the storm passed and the tornado sirens went off. Tom Brady
flew into that. I talked to the FSDO here about his accident -- his wreckage
was scattered over four miles. He was flying in the low FL 20's when he
penetrated the storm.
Living in St. Louis has made every trip this year one with
thunderstorms. I have not topped one yet.
Be careful out there!
Jeff