Operational Wind Shear Detection and Warning: The “CLAWS” Experience at Denver and Future Objectives
861847
10/01/1986
- Content
- An operational wind shear detection and warning experiment was conducted at Denver's Stapleton International Airport in summer 1984. Based on meteorological interpretation of scope displays from a Doppler weather radar, warnings were transmitted to the air traffic control tower via voice radio. Analyses of results indicated real skill in daily microburst forecasts and very short-term (<5 min) warnings. Wind shift advisories, 15-30 min forecasts, permitted more efficient runway reconfigurations. Potential fuel savings were estimated at $875,000/yr at Stapleton. The philosophy of future development toward an automated, operational system is discussed.
- Pages
- 8
- Citation
- McCarthy, J., Wilson, J., and Hjelmfelt, M., "Operational Wind Shear Detection and Warning: The “CLAWS” Experience at Denver and Future Objectives," SAE Technical Paper 861847, 1986, https://doi.org/10.4271/861847.