METARs & TAFs: Weather Basics Without Overwhelm
The first time most student pilots see a METAR, it looks like a line of random letters and numbers that would take forever to decode. But experienced pilots read them in seconds. This episode walks you through exactly how to read a METAR and a TAF, piece by piece. We designed this so you can follow along just by listening.In This Episode:• What a METAR and a TAF actually are, and why they're not interchangeable.• How to read a METAR left to right: station, time, wind, visibility, sky condition, temp/dewpoint, altimeter, remarks.• The difference between FEW, SCT, BKN, and OVC, and which ones count as a ceiling.• Why checking the TAF at your departure airport matters just as much as your destination.• Variable wind direction.• Temperature-dewpoint spread and early morning fog risk.• How to read TAF change groups: FM, BECMG, and TEMPO.Key Takeaways:• METARs follow the same structure every time; learn the pattern once, and you can read any of them.• Flashcards for the abbreviations work. It's like learning a language. Once the codes click, you can't unsee them.• Always check the weather for both ends of your flight, especially on solo cross-countries.• Watch the temp-dewpoint spread; within 3°C means fog risk• In TAFs, know FM, BECMG, and TEMPO, and check the window covering your entire flight.Sample METAR (referenced in episode):METAR KRAL 141953Z 28005KT 10SM FEW060 BKN180 22/08 A2988 RMK AO2 SLP122 T02170083Sample TAF (referenced in episode):TAF KRAL 1418/1518 28006KT P6SM FEW060 BKN200 FM150200 VRB03KT P6SM SCT040 BKN120 BECMG 1508/1510 18008KT 5SM HZ BKN030 TEMPO 1512/1516 3SM TSRA BKN020CBResources:Free Private Pilot Study Sheet: https://hub.pilotinstitute.com/private-pilot-study-sheet-landing [https://hub.pilotinstitute.com/private-pilot-study-sheet-landing]Your Flight Controls is produced in association with Pilot Institute. New episodes drop weekly.Got a question or a topic you want us to cover? Reach out to us!