Where to get it, how to read it, and how to turn it into a go / no-go decision.
By the end of this lesson you can:
Name the official weather sources and the three briefing types.
Read a METAR and a TAF and say what each is for.
List the weather hazards that matter most to a helicopter.
Apply preflight weather to a personal-minimums go/no-go.
1 · Sources & briefing types
Get an official briefing from 1-800-WXBRIEF (Leidos Flight Service) or aviationweather.gov / an approved EFB. Three briefing types: Standard (the full picture before a flight), Abbreviated (to update specific items), and Outlook (for a flight 6+ hours out). FAR 91.103 requires you to gather “all available information” before flight.
2 · Watch: reading METARs & TAFs
Curated reference clip — “How to Read METARs and TAFs | Aviation Weather Explained for Student Pilots,” Epic Flight Academy (YouTube).
3 · The products you’ll use
Product
What it tells you
METAR
Current observed conditions at an airport (issued ~hourly).
TAF
Forecast for an airport, next 24–30 hours.
Winds & Temps Aloft
Forecast wind/temperature at altitudes — key for performance and drift.
PIREP
Real conditions reported by pilots (turbulence, icing, cloud tops).
AIRMET / SIGMET
Advisories for hazards (turbulence, icing, IFR, convection).
Graphics
Prog charts, radar, satellite, ceiling/visibility — the big picture.
4 · Hazards that matter to a helicopter
Thunderstorms and gust fronts; airframe/induction icing; fog and low ceilings (marginal VFR); strong or gusty wind and mechanical/mountain turbulence; and density altitude — high DA on a hot day robs power and is a constant Adirondack concern. Mountain and valley wind near terrain can exceed what flat-land flying ever shows you.
Your aircraft: check the R44 POH Section 2 limitations and density-altitude performance for N668SA against the day’s conditions.
✍️ Fill in for the aircraft you fly (N-________)
Value / limit:
R44 POH section & page:
Leave blank until you look it up in your R44 POH (see the reference above) and confirm it with your CFI. Aircraft-specific numbers vary with weight & conditions — don’t guess.
✍️ Fill in for the aircraft you fly (N-________)
Value / limit:
R44 POH section & page:
Leave blank until you look it up in your R44 POH (see the reference above) and confirm it with your CFI. Aircraft-specific numbers vary with weight & conditions — don’t guess.
Risk management (the “Consider”): a clean METAR at your departure field doesn’t mean the ridge route is flyable. Brief the whole picture, set personal minimums in advance, and treat “marginal” as a no-go until proven otherwise — the pressure to launch is exactly when good weather discipline pays off.