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EXAMPLE-
Example of an AWW:
MKC AWW 011734
WW 75 TORNADO TX OK AR 011800Z-020000Z
AXIS..80 STATUTE MILES EAST AND WEST OF A
LINE..60ESE DAL/DALLAS TX/ - 30 NW ARG/ WALNUT
RIDGE AR/
..AVIATION COORDS.. 70NM E/W /58W GGG - 25NW
ARG/
HAIL SURFACE AND ALOFT..1
3
/4 INCHES. WIND
GUSTS..70 KNOTS. MAX TOPS TO 450. MEAN WIND
VECTOR 24045.
e) Soon after the AWW goes out, the actual watch
bulletin itself is issued. A WW is in the following
format:
1) Type of severe weather watch, watch area,
valid time period, type of severe weather possible,
watch axis, meaning of a watch, and a statement that
persons should be on the lookout for severe weather.
2) Other watch information; i.e., references to
previous watches.
3) Phenomena, intensities, hail size, wind speed
(knots), maximum cumulonimbus (CB) tops, and
estimated cell movement (mean wind vector).
4) Cause of severe weather.
5) Information on updating Convective Outlook
(AC) products.
EXAMPLE-
Example of a WW:
BULLETIN - IMMEDIATE BROADCAST REQUESTED
TORNADO WATCH NUMBER 381
STORM PREDICTION CENTER NORMAN OK
556 PM CDT MON JUN 2 1997
THE STORM PREDICTON CENTER HAS ISSUED A
TORNADO WATCH FOR PORTIONS OF NORTHEAST
NEW MEXICO TEXAS PANHANDLE
EFFECTIVE THIS MONDAY NIGHT AND TUESDAY
MORNING FROM 630 PM UNTIL MIDNIGHT CDT.
TORNADOES...HAIL TO 2
3
/4 INCHES IN DIAME-
TER...THUNDERSTORM WIND GUSTS TO 80
MPH...AND DANGEROUS LIGHTNING ARE POSSIBLE
IN THESE AREAS.
THE TORNADO WATCH AREA IS ALONG AND 60
STATUTE MILES NORTH AND SOUTH OF A LINE
FROM 50 MILES SOUTHWEST OF RATON NEW
MEXICO TO 50 MILES EAST OF AMARILLO TEXAS.
REMEMBER...A TORNADO WATCH MEANS CON-
DITIONS ARE FAVORABLE FOR TORNADOES AND
SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS IN AND CLOSE TO THE
WATCH AREA. PERSONS IN THESE AREAS SHOULD
BE ON THE LOOKOUT FOR THREATENING WEATH-
ER CONDITIONS AND LISTEN FOR LATER STATE-
MENTS AND POSSIBLE WARNINGS.
OTHER WATCH INFORMATION...CONTINUE...
WW_378...WW 379...WW 380
DISCUSSION...THUNDERSTORMS ARE INCREASING
OVER NE NM IN MOIST SOUTHEASTERLY UPSLOPE
FLOW. OUTFLOW BOUNDARY EXTENDS EASTWARD
INTO THE TEXAS PANHANDLE AND EXPECT STORMS
TO MOVE ESE ALONG AND NORTH OF THE
BOUNDARY ON THE N EDGE OF THE CAP. VEERING
WINDS WITH HEIGHT ALONG WITH INCREASGING
30 AUG 07
AIP
United States of America
GEN 3.5-19
15 MAR 07
Federal Aviation Administration Nineteenth Edition
MID LVL FLOW INDICATE A THREAT FOR SUPER-
CELLS.
AVIATION...TORNADOES AND A FEW SEVERE THUN-
DERSTORMS WITH HAIL SURFACE AND ALOFT TO
2_3 /4 INCHES. EXTREME TURBULENCE AND SUR-
FACE WIND GUSTS TO 70 KNOTS. A FEW CUMULO-
NIMBI WITH MAXIMUM TOPS TO 550. MEAN STORM
MOTION VECTOR 28025.
f) Status reports are issued as needed to show
progress of storms and to delineate areas no longer
under the threat of severe storm activity. Cancellation
bulletins are issued when it becomes evident that no
severe weather will develop or that storms have
subsided and are no longer severe.
g) When tornadoes or severe thunderstorms have
developed, the local WFO office will issue the
warnings covering those areas.
3.9.3.8 Center Weather Advisories (CWAs)
a) CWAs are unscheduled inflight, flow control,
air traffic, and air crew advisory. By nature of its short
lead time, the CWA is not a flight planning product.
It is generally a nowcast for conditions beginning
within the next two hours. CWAs will be issued:
1) As a supplement to an existing SIGMET,
Convective SIGMET or AIRMET.
2) When an Inflight Advisory has not been
issued but observed or expected weather conditions
meet SIGMET/AIRMET criteria based on current
pilot reports and reinforced by other sources of
information about existing meteorological condi-
tions.
3) When observed or developing weather
conditions do not meet SIGMET, Convective
SIGMET, or AIRMET criteria; e.g., in terms of
intensity or area coverage, but current pilot reports or
other weather information sources indicate that
existing or anticipated meteorological phenomena
will adversely affect the safe flow of air traffic within
the ARTCC area of responsibility.
b) The following example is a CWA issued from
the Kansas City, Missouri, ARTCC. The “3” after
ZKC in the first line denotes this CWA has been
issued for the third weather phenomena to occur for
the day. The “301” in the second line denotes the
phenomena number again (3) and the issuance
number (01) for this phenomena. The CWA was
issued at 2140Z and is valid until 2340Z.
EXAMPLE-
ZKC3 CWA 032140
ZKC CWA 301 VALID UNTIL 032340
ISOLD SVR TSTM over KCOU MOVG SWWD 10
KTS ETC.
4. Categorical Outlooks
4.1 Categorical outlook terms describing general
ceiling and visibility conditions for advance planning
purposes are used only in area forecasts. They are
defined as follows:
4.1.1 LIFR (Low IFR)_-_Ceiling less than 500 feet
and/or visibility less than 1 mile.
4.1.2 IFR_-_Ceiling 500 to less than 1,000 feet and/or
visibility 1 to less than 3 miles.
4.1.3 MVFR (Marginal VFR)_-_Ceiling 1,000 or
3,000 feet and/or visibility 3 to 5 miles inclusive.
4.1.4 VFR_-_Ceiling greater than 3,000 feet and
visibility greater than 5 miles; includes sky clear.
4.2 The cause of LIFR, IFR, or MVFR is indicated
by either ceiling or visibility restrictions or both. The
contraction “CIG” and/or weather and obstruction to
vision symbols are used. If winds or gusts of 25 knots
or greater are forecast for the outlook period, the word
“WIND” is also included for all categories, including
VFR.
EXAMPLE-
LIFR CIG-low IFR due to low ceiling.
IFR FG-IFR due to visibility restricted by fog.
MVFR CIG HZ FU-marginal VFR due both to ceiling and
to visibility restricted by haze and smoke.
IFR CIG RA WIND-IFR due both to low ceiling and to
visibility restricted by rain; wind expected to be 25 knots or
greater.
30 AUG 07
AIP
United States of America
GEN 3.5-20
15 MAR 07
Federal Aviation Administration Nineteenth Edition
5. Telephone Information Briefing Service
(TIBS)_
5.1 TIBS, provided by automated flight service
stations (AFSSs), is a continuous recording of
meteorological and aeronautical information, avail-
able by telephone. Each AFSS provides at least four
route and/or area briefings. In addition, airspace
procedures and special announcements (if applica-
ble) concerning aviation interests are also available.
Depending upon user demand, other items may be
provided; i.e., METAR observations, terminal airport
forecasts, winds aloft, and temperatures aloft
forecasts.
6. Inflight Weather Broadcasts
6.1 Weather Advisory Broadcasts. ARTCCs'
broadcast a Severe Weather Forecast Alert (AWW),
Convective SIGMET, or CWA alert once on all
frequencies, except emergency, when any part of the
area described is within 150 miles of the airspace
under their jurisdiction. These broadcasts contain
SIGMET or CWA identification and a brief
description of the weather activity and general area
affected.
EXAMPLE-
Attention all aircraft, SIGMET Delta Three, from Myton to
Tuba City to Milford, severe turbulence and severe clear
icing below one zero thousand feet. Expected to continue
beyond zero three zero zero zulu.
EXAMPLE-
Attention all aircraft, Convective SIGMET Two Seven
Eastern. From the vicinity of Elmira to Phillipsburg.
Scattered embedded thunderstorms moving east at one
zero knots. A few intense level five cells, maximum tops four
five zero.
EXAMPLE-
Attention all aircraft, Kansas City Center weather advisory
one zero three. Numerous reports of moderate to severe
icing from eight to niner thousand feet in a three zero mile
radius of St. Louis. Light or negative icing reported from
four thousand to one two thousand feet remainder of
Kansas City Center area.
NOTE-
Terminal control facilities have the option to limit the
AWW, Convective SIGMET, SIGMET, or CWA broadcast
as follows: local control and approach control positions
may opt to broadcast SIGMET or CWA alerts only when
any part of the area described is within 50 miles of the
airspace under their jurisdiction.
6.2 Hazardous Inflight Weather Advisory Ser-
vice (HIWAS). This is a continuous broadcast of
inflight weather advisories including summarized
AWWs, SIGMETs, Convective SIGMETs, CWAs,
AIRMETs, and urgent PIREPs. HIWAS has been
adopted as a national program and will be
implemented throughout the conterminous U.S. as
resources permit. In those areas where HIWAS is
commissioned, ARTCC, Terminal ATC, and AFSS/
FSS facilities have discontinued the broadcast of
inflight advisories. HIWAS is an additional source of
hazardous weather information which makes these
data available on a continuous basis. It is not,
however, a replacement for preflight or inflight
briefings or real-time weather updates from Flight
Watch (EFAS). As HIWAS is implemented in
individual center areas, the commissioning will be
advertised in the Notices to Airmen publication.
6.2.1 Where HIWAS has been implemented, a
HIWAS alert will be broadcast on all except
emergency frequencies once upon receipt by ARTCC
and terminal facilities which will include an alert
announcement, frequency instruction, number, and
type of advisory updated; e.g., AWW, SIGMET,
Convective SIGMET, or CWA.
EXAMPLE-
Attention all aircraft. Hazardous weather information
(SIGMET, Convective SIGMET, AIRMET, urgent pilot
weather report (UUA), or Center Weather Advisory
(CWA)), (number or numbers) for (geographical area)
available on HIWAS, flight watch, or flight service
frequencies.
6.2.2 In HIWAS ARTCC areas, AFSSs/FSSs will
broadcast a HIWAS update announcement once on all
except emergency frequencies upon completion of
recording an update to the HIWAS broadcast.
Included in the broadcast will be the type of advisory
update; e.g., AWW, SIGMET, Convective SIGMET,
or CWA.
EXAMPLE-
Attention all aircraft. Hazardous weather information for
(geographical area) available from flight watch or flight
service.
6.2.3 HIWAS availability is shown on IFR En Route
Low Altitude Charts and VFR Sectional Charts. The
symbol depiction is identified in the chart legend.
30 AUG 07
AIP
United States of America
GEN 3.5-21
15 MAR 07
Federal Aviation Administration Nineteenth Edition
7. Flight Information Services (FIS)
7.1 FIS. Aviation weather and other operational
information may be displayed in the cockpit through
the use of FIS. FIS systems are of two basic types:
Broadcast only systems (called FIS-B) and two-way
request/reply systems. Broadcast system components
include a ground- or space-based transmitter, an
aircraft receiver, and a portable or installed cockpit
display device. Two-way systems utilize transmitter/
receivers at both the ground- or space-based site and
the aircraft.
7.1.1 Broadcast FIS (i.e., FIS-B) allows the pilot to
passively collect weather and other operational data
and to display that data at the appropriate time. In
addition to textual weather products such as Aviation
Routine Weather Reports (METARs)/Aviation Se-
lected Special Weather Reports (SPECIs) and
Terminal Area Forecasts (TAFs), graphical weather
products such as radar composite/mosaic images,
temporary flight restricted airspace and other
NOTAMs may be provided to the cockpit. Two-way
FIS services permit the pilot to make specific weather
and other operational information requests for
cockpit display. A FIS service provider will then
prepare a reply in response to that specific request and
transmit the product to that specific aircraft.
7.1.2 FIS services are available from four types of
service providers:
7.1.2.1 A private sector FIS provider operating
under service agreement with the FAA using
broadcast data link over VHF aeronautical spectrum
and whose products have been reviewed and accepted
by the FAA prior to transmission. (Products and
services are defined under subparagraph 7.3.)
7.1.2.2 Through an FAA operated service using a
broadcast data link on the ADS-B UAT network.
(Products and services are defined under subpara-
graph 7.4.)
7.1.2.3 Private sector FIS providers operating under
customer contracts using aeronautical spectrum.
7.1.2.4 Private sector FIS providers operating under
customer contract using methods other than
aeronautical spectrum, including Internet data-tothe-cockpit service providers.
7.1.3 FIS is a method of receiving aviation weather
and other operational data in the cockpit that
augments traditional pilot voice communication with
FAA's Flight Service Stations (FSSs), ATC facilities,
or Airline Operations Control Centers (AOCCs). FIS
is not intended to replace traditional pilot and
controller/flight service specialist/aircraft dispatcher
pre-flight briefings or inflight voice communica-
tions. FIS; however, can provide textual and
graphical background information that can help
abbreviate and improve the usefulness of such
communications. FIS enhances pilot situational
awareness and improves safety.
7.1.4 To ensure airman compliance with Federal
Aviation Regulations, manufacturer's operating
manuals should remind airmen to contact ATC
controllers, FSS specialists, operator dispatchers, or
airline operations control centers for general and
mission critical aviation weather information and/or
NAS status conditions (such as NOTAMs, Special
Use Airspace status, and other government flight
information). If FIS products are systemically
modified (for example, are displayed as abbreviated
plain text and/or graphical depictions), the modifica-
tion process and limitations of the resultant product
should be clearly described in the vendor's user
guidance.
7.2 Operational Use of FIS. Regardless of the type
of FIS system being used, several factors must be
considered when using FIS:
7.2.1 Before using FIS for inflight operations, pilots
and other flight crewmembers should become
familiar with the operation of the FIS system to be
used, the airborne equipment to be used, including its
system architecture, airborne system components,
coverage service volume and other limitations of the
particular system, modes of operation and indications
of various system failures. Users should also be
familiar with the specific content and format of the
services available from the FIS provider(s). Sources
of information that may provide this specific
guidance include manufacturer's manuals, training
programs and reference guides.
7.2.2 FIS should not serve as the sole source of
aviation weather and other operational information.
ATC, AFSSs and, if applicable, AOCC VHF/HF
voice remain as a redundant method of communicat-
ing aviation weather, NOTAMs, and other operation-
al information to aircraft in flight. FIS augments these
traditional ATC/FSS/AOCC services and, for some
products, offers the advantage of being displayed as
graphical information. By using FIS for orientation,
the usefulness of information received from
30 AUG 07
AIP
United States of America
GEN 3.5-22
15 MAR 07
Federal Aviation Administration Nineteenth Edition
conventional means may be enhanced. For example,
FIS may alert the pilot to specific areas of concern
that will more accurately focus requests made to FSS
or AOCC for inflight updates or similar queries made
to ATC.
7.2.3 The airspace and aeronautical environment is
constantly changing. These changes occur quickly
and without warning. Critical operational decisions
should be based on use of the most current and
appropriate data available. When differences exist
between FIS and information obtained by voice
communication with ATC, FSS, and/or AOCC (if
applicable), pilots are cautioned to use the most
recent data from the most authoritative source.
7.2.4 FIS aviation weather products (e.g., graphical
ground-based radar precipitation depictions) are not
appropriate for tactical avoidance of severe weather
such as negotiating a path through a weather hazard
area. FIS supports strategic weather decision making
such as route selection to avoid a weather hazard area
in its entirety. The misuse of information beyond its
applicability may place the pilot and aircraft in
jeopardy. In addition, FIS should never be used in lieu
of an individual pre-flight weather and flight
planning briefing.
7.2.5 FIS NOTAM products, including Temporary
Flight Restriction (TFR) information, are advisoryuse information and are intended for situational
awareness purposes only. Cockpit displays of this
information are not appropriate for tactical naviga-
tion - pilots should stay clear of any geographic area
displayed as a TFR NOTAM. Pilots should contact
FSSs and/or ATC while en route to obtain updated
information and to verify the cockpit display of
NOTAM information.
7.2.6 FIS supports better pilot decision making by
increasing situational awareness. Better decisionmaking is based on using information from a variety
of sources. In addition to FIS, pilots should take
advantage of other weather/NAS status sources,
including, briefings from Flight Service Stations,
FAA's en route “Flight Watch” service, data from
other air traffic control facilities, airline operation
control centers, pilot reports, as well as their own
observations.
7.3 FAA FISDL (VHF) Service. The FAA's
FISDL (VHF datalink) system is a VHF Data Link
(VDL) Mode 2 implementation that provides pilots
and flight crews of properly equipped aircraft with a
cockpit display of certain aviation weather and flight
operational information. This information may be
displayed in both textual and graphical formats. The
system is operated under a service agreement with the
FAA, using broadcast data link on VHF aeronautical
spectrum on two 25 KHz spaced frequencies
(136.450 and 136.475 MHz). The FAA FISDL
(VHF) service is designed to provide coverage
throughout the continental U.S. from 5,000 feet AGL
to 17,500 feet MSL, except in areas where this is not
feasible due to mountainous terrain. Aircraft
operating near transmitter sites may receive useable
FISDL signals at altitudes lower than 5,000 feet
AGL, including on the surface in some locations,
depending on transmitter/aircraft line of sight
geometry. Aircraft operating above 17,500 feet MSL
may also receive useable FISDL signals under certain
circumstances.
7.3.1 FAA FISDL (VHF) service provides, free of
charge, the following basic text products:
7.3.1.1 Aviation Routine Weather Reports
(METARs).
7.3.1.2 Aviation Selected Special Weather Reports
(SPECIs).
7.3.1.3 Terminal Area Forecasts (TAFs), and their
amendments.
7.3.1.4 Significant Meteorological Information
(SIGMETs).
7.3.1.5 Convective SIGMETs.
7.3.1.6 Airman's Meteorological Information
(AIRMETs).
7.3.1.7 Pilot Reports (both urgent and routine)
(PIREPs); and,
7.3.1.8 Severe Weather Forecast Alerts and Warn-
ings (AWWs/WW) issued by the NOAA Storm
Prediction Center (SPC).
7.3.2 The format and coding of these text products
are described in Advisory Circular AC-00-45,
Aviation Weather Services, and FIG GEN 3.5-23
and FIG GEN 3.5-24, Key to Aerodrome Forecast
(TAF) and Aviation Routine Weather Report
(METAR).
7.3.3 Additional products, called “Value-Added
Products,” are also available from the vendor on a
paid subscription basis. Details concerning the
30 AUG 07
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United States of America
GEN 3.5-23
15 MAR 07
Federal Aviation Administration Nineteenth Edition
content, format, symbology and cost of these
products may be obtained from the vendor.
7.4 FAA's Flight Information Service-Broadcast
(FIS-B) Service. FIS-B is a ground broadcast
service provided through the FAA's Universal Access
Transceiver (UAT) “ADS-B Broadcast Services”
network. The UAT network is an ADS-B data link
that operates on 978 MHz. The FAA FIS-B system
provides pilots and flight crews of properly equipped
aircraft with a cockpit display of certain aviation
weather and flight operational information. The
FAA's FIS-B service is being introduced in certain
regional implementations within the NAS (e.g., in
Alaska and in other areas of implementation).
7.4.1 FAA's UAT FIS-B provides the initial products
listed below with additional products planned for
future implementation. FIS-B reception is line of
sight and can be expected within 200 NM (nominal
range) of each ground transmitting site. The
following services are provided free of charge.
7.4.1.1 Text: Aviation Routine Weather Reports
(METARs).
7.4.1.2 Text: Special Aviation Reports (SPECIs).
7.4.1.3 Text: Terminal Area Forecasts (TAFs), and
their amendments.
7.4.1.4 Graphic: NEXRAD precipitation maps.
7.4.2 The format and coding of the above text
weather-related products are described in Advisory
Circular AC-00-45, Aviation Weather Services, and
FIG GEN 3.5-23 and FIG GEN 3.5-24, Key to
Aerodrome Forecast (TAF) and Aviation Routine
Weather Report (METAR).
7.4.3 Details concerning the content, format, and
symbology of the various data link products provided
may be obtained from the specific avionics
manufacturer.
7.5 Non-FAA FISDL Systems. Several commer-
cial vendors also provide customers with FIS data
over both the aeronautical spectrum and on other
frequencies using a variety of data link protocols. In
some cases, the vendors provide only the commu-
nications system that carries customer messages,
such as the Aircraft Communications Addressing and
Reporting System (ACARS) used by many air carrier
and other operators.
7.5.1 Operators using non-FAA FIS data for inflight
weather and other operational information should
ensure that the products used conform to FAA/NWS
standards. Specifically, aviation weather and NAS
status information should meet the following criteria:
7.5.1.1 The products should be either FAA/NWS
“accepted” aviation weather reports or products, or
based on FAA/NWS accepted aviation weather
reports or products. If products are used which do not
meet this criteria, they should be so identified. The
operator must determine the applicability of such
products to their particular flight operations.
7.5.1.2 In the case of a weather product which is the
result of the application of a process which alters the
form, function or content of the base FAA/NWS
accepted weather product(s), that process, and any
limitations to the application of the resultant product,
should be described in the vendor's user guidance
material.
7.5.2 An example would be a NEXRAD radar
composite/mosaic map, which has been modified by
changing the scaling resolution. The methodology of
assigning reflectivity values to the resultant image
components should be described in the vendor's
guidance material to ensure that the user can
accurately interpret the displayed data.
8. Weather Observing Programs
8.1 Manual Observations. Aviation Routine
Weather Reports (METAR) are taken at more than
600 locations in the U.S. With only a few exceptions,
these stations are located at airport sites and most are
staffed by FAA or NWS personnel who manually
observe, perform calculations, and enter the
observation into the distribution system. The format
and coding of these observations are contained in
FIG GEN 3.5-23.
8.2 Automated Weather Observing System
(AWOS)
8.2.1 Automated weather reporting systems are
increasingly being installed at airports. These
systems consist of various sensors, a processor, a
computer-generated voice subsystem, and a trans-
mitter to broadcast local, minute-by-minute weather
data directly to the pilot.
NOTE-
When the barometric pressure exceeds 31.00 inches Hg.,
see Section ENR 1.7, Altimeter Setting Procedures.
8.2.2 The AWOS observations will include the
prefix “AUTO” to indicate that the data are derived
30 AUG 07
AIP
United States of America
GEN 3.5-24
15 MAR 07
Federal Aviation Administration Nineteenth Edition
from an automated system. Some AWOS locations
will be augmented by certified observers who will
provide weather and obstruction to vision informa-
tion in the remarks of the report when the reported
visibility is less than 3 miles. These sites, along with
the hours of augmentation, are published in the
Airport/Facility Directory. Augmentation is identi-
fied in the observation as “OBSERVER WEATH-
ER.” The AWOS wind speed, direction and gusts,
temperature, dew point, and altimeter setting are
exactly the same as for manual observations. The
AWOS will also report density altitude when it
exceeds the field elevation by more than 1,000 feet.
The reported visibility is derived from a sensor near
the touchdown of the primary instrument runway.
The visibility sensor output is converted to a visibility
value using a 10-minute harmonic average. The
reported sky condition/ceiling is derived from the
ceilometer located next to the visibility sensor. The
AWOS algorithm integrates the last 30 minutes of
ceilometer data to derive cloud layers and heights.
This output may also differ from the observer sky
condition in that the AWOS is totally dependent upon
the cloud advection over the sensor site.
8.2.3 Referred to as AWOS, these real-time systems
are operationally classified into four basic levels:
8.2.3.1 AWOS-A: only reports altimeter setting.
NOTE-
Any other information is advisory only.
8.2.3.2 AWOS-l: usually reports altimeter setting,
wind data, temperature, dew point, and density
altitude.
8.2.3.3 AWOS-2 provides the information provided
by AWOS-l, plus visibility.
8.2.3.4 AWOS-3 provides the information provided
by AWOS-2, plus cloud/ceiling data.
8.2.4 The information is transmitted over a discrete
VHF radio frequency or the voice portion of a local
NAVAID. AWOS transmissions on a discrete VHF
radio frequency are engineered to be receivable to a
maximum of 25 NM from the AWOS site and a
maximum altitude of 10,000 feet AGL. At many
locations, AWOS signals may be received on the
surface of the airport, but local conditions may limit
the maximum AWOS reception distance and/or
altitude. The system transmits a 20- to 30-second
weather message updated each minute. Pilots should
monitor the designated frequency for the automated
weather broadcast. A description of the broadcast is
contained in paragraph 8.3, Automated Weather
Observing System (AWOS) Broadcasts. There is no
two-way communication capability. Most AWOS
sites also have a dial-up capability so that the
minute-by-minute weather messages can be ac-
cessed via telephone.
8.2.5 AWOS information (system level, frequency,
phone number) concerning specific locations is
published, as the systems become operational, in the
Airport/Facility Directory and, where applicable, on
published Instrument Approach Procedure (IAP)
charts. Selected individual systems may be incorpo-
rated into nationwide data collection and dissemina-
tion networks in the future.
8.3 Automated Weather Observing System
(AWOS) Broadcasts. Computer-generated voice is
used in AWOS to automate the broadcast of the
minute-by-minute weather observations. In addi-
tion, some systems are configured to permit the
addition of an operator-generated voice message;
e.g., weather remarks, following the automated
parameters. The phraseology used generally follows
that used for other weather broadcasts. Following are
explanations and examples of the exceptions.
8.3.1 Location and Time. The location/name and
the phrase “AUTOMATED WEATHER OBSERVA-
TION” followed by the time are announced.
8.3.1.1 If the airport's specific location is included in
the airport's name, the airport's name is announced.
EXAMPLE-
“Bremerton National Airport automated weather
observation one four five six zulu.”
“Ravenswood Jackson County Airport automated weather
observation one four five six zulu.”
8.3.1.2 If the airport's specific location is not
included in the airport's name, the location is
announced followed by the airport's name.
EXAMPLE-
“Sault Ste. Marie, Chippewa County International Airport
automated weather observation.”
“Sandusky, Cowley Field automated weather
observation.” |
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