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| | #26 |
| Senior Member Join Date: Aug 2000 Location: Salt Lake City
Posts: 562
| Your instructor could be refering to an FAA written exam question, can't remember which test, that asked which cloud was associated with severe turbulence. The answer was the standing lenticular. Another way to think about it is that the lenticular and rotor don't actually casue the turbulence. They are merely a byproduct of the mtn wave phenomenon. On a very dry day the mtn wave, rotors & turbulence can be happening, but the lenticulars won't be around. Whereas with Cumulonimus, towering cumulus clouds etc. they are the actual cause of the turbulence. |
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| | #27 |
| Old Skool | What about the bubbly ones; the ones that look like boobies on the underside of the overcast? They're even called something similar to boobies...Mammatus ![]() |
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| | #28 |
| Old Skool | |
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| | #29 |
| Old Skool | How do you think I passed my meterology test on clouds . Word association baby...dirty word association |
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| | #30 |
| Banned Join Date: Jul 2004 Location: Phoenix, AZ
Posts: 7,329
| Yeah, and it's on like 5 or 6 writtens so just memorize that. Ergo my post way early in this thread. |
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| | #31 |
| Old Skool | |
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