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  2. Headwind and tailwind - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Headwind_and_tailwind

    The aircraft is said to have 7.5 knots of crosswind and 13 knots of headwind on runway 06, or 13 knots of tailwind on runway 24. Aircraft usually have maximum tailwind and crosswind components which they cannot exceed. If the wind is at eighty degrees or above it is said to be full-cross.

  3. Crosswind - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Crosswind

    The headwind is about 22 knots, and the crosswind is about 13 knots. [1] To determine the crosswind component in aviation, aviators frequently refer to a nomograph chart on which the wind speed and angle are plotted, and the crosswind component is read from a reference line. Direction of travel relative to the wind may be left or right, up or ...

  4. Crosswind landing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Crosswind_landing

    The sideslip crosswind technique is to maintain the aircraft's heading aligned with the runway centerline. The initial phase of the approach is flown using the crab technique to correct for drift. The aircraft heading is adjusted using opposite rudder and ailerons into the wind to align with the runway.

  5. Marin County Airport - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marin_County_Airport

    The typical Gnoss Field crosswind landing conditions on runway 31 are stronger than reported headwind on right base and, in a typical training aircraft, a slight amount of wind shear about 100 feet (30 m) before the runway 31 threshold, settling down to a steady crosswind - but then adding to a slight headwind component, just past the near west ...

  6. Wind triangle - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wind_triangle

    The unknown quantities are read from the chart using the same tools. Alternatively, the E6B flight computer (a circular slide rule with a translucent "wind face" on which to plot the vectors) can be used to graphically solve the wind triangle equations.

  7. Wake turbulence - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wake_turbulence

    During takeoff and landing, an aircraft's wake sinks toward the ground and moves laterally away from the runway when the wind is calm. A three-to-five-knot (3–6 mph; 6–9 km/h) crosswind will tend to keep the upwind side of the wake in the runway area and may cause the downwind side to drift toward another runway. Since the wingtip vortices ...

  8. Headwind (disambiguation) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Headwind_(disambiguation)

    Headwind is a wind that blows against the direction of travel. Headwind may also refer to: Stewart Headwind, a homebuilt aircraft "Headwind" (song), from the 2019 album You Deserve Love by White Reaper; Headwinds, a 2011 French film; A component of a crosswind

  9. Ground speed - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ground_speed

    Ground speed can be determined by the vector sum of the aircraft's true airspeed and the current wind speed and direction; a headwind subtracts from the ground speed, while a tailwind adds to it. Winds at other angles to the heading will have components of either headwind or tailwind as well as a crosswind component.