Aviation Routine Weather Report (METAR)
Pilot Weather Reports (PIREPs) (UA)
Terminal Aerodrome Forecast (TAF)
Graphical Forecasts for Aviation (GFA)
Winds and Temperatures Aloft Forecast (FB)
Inflight Weather Advisories (WA, WS, WST)
1-800-WX-BRIEF (Telephone and Self-Briefing)
An international weather reporting code is used for weather reports (METAR) and forecasts (TAFs) worldwide. The reports follow the format shown in Figure 9-1.
For aviation purposes, the ceiling is the lowest broken or overcast layer, or vertical visibility into an obscuration.

Figure 9-1. TAF/METAR weather card
Aircraft in flight are the only means of directly observing cloud tops, icing, and turbulence; therefore, no observation is more timely than one made from the flight deck. While the FAA encourages pilots to report inflight weather, a report of any unforecast weather is required by regulation. A PIREP (identified by the letters “UA”) is usually transmitted in a prescribed format. See Figure 9-2.

Figure 9-2
UA/OV KOKC-KTUL/TM 1800/FL120/TP BE90/SK BKN018-TOP055/OVC072-TOP089/CLR ABV/TA M7/WV 08021/TB LGT 055-072/IC LGT-MOD RIME 072-089.
Decodes as follows:
Pilot report, Oklahoma City to Tulsa at 1800Z at 12,000 feet.
Type of aircraft is a Beech King Air 90.
The first cloud layer has a base of 1,800 feet broken, with tops at 5,500 feet.
The second cloud layer base is 7,200 feet overcast with tops at 8,900 feet.
It is clear above.
Outside air temperature is -7° Celsius.
The wind is 080° at 21 knots.
There is light turbulence between 5,500 feet and 7,200 feet.
There is light to moderate rime icing reported between 7,200 feet and 8,900 feet.
A Terminal Aerodrome Forecast (TAF) is a concise statement of the expected meteorological conditions at an airport during a specified period (usually 24 hours). TAFs use the same code used in the METAR weather reports (See Figure 7-1).
TAFs are issued in the following format:
TYPE / LOCATION / ISSUANCE TIME / VALID TIME / FORECAST
Note: The “/” above are for separation purposes and do not appear in the actual TAFs.
The GFA at the Aviation Weather Center (AWC) website is an interactive display providing continuously updated observed and forecast weather information over the continental United States (CONUS). It is intended to give users a complete picture of weather critical to aviation safety. The GFA display shows user-selected weather categories, each containing multiple fields of interest at altitudes from the surface up to FL480. Depending on the field of interest chosen, weather information is available from -14 hours in the past (observed) to +18 hours in the future (forecast).
The GFA is not considered a weather product but an aggregate of several existing weather products. The information and data from the various weather products are overlaid on a high-resolution basemap of the United States: aviationweather.gov/gfa. The user selects flight levels and current time period for either observed or forecast weather information. Mouse-clicking or hovering over the map provides additional information in textual format, such as current METAR or TAF for a selected airport. The GFA replaces the textual area forecast (FA) for the CONUS and Hawaii with a more modern digital solution for obtaining weather information. The Aviation Surface Forecast and Aviation Cloud Forecast graphics are snapshot images derived from a subset of the aviation weather forecasts.
The winds and temperatures aloft forecast is displayed in a 6-digit format (DDffTT). It shows wind direction (DD), wind velocity (ff), and the temperature (TT) that is forecast to exist at specified levels. For example, “234502” decodes as: winds from 230 degrees true north, at 45 knots, temperatures 02°C.
When the wind speed (ff) is between 100 and 199 knots, the wind direction (DD) portion of the code will be greater than 50. In cases such as this, you will need to subtract 50 from the coded wind direction, and add 100 to the coded wind speed in order to decipher the code. For example, “734502” decodes as: winds from 230 degrees true north at 145 knots, temperature 02 degrees C.
Temperatures with a negative symbol in front of them (DDff-37) are negative. For flight levels above 24,000, temperatures are always negative and will not have a negative symbol. Light and variable winds or wind speeds below 5 knots are indicated by 9900, followed by the forecast temperature. For example, the coded winds aloft forecast for flight level FL270 (flight level 27,000) is “990017” and decodes as: winds are light and variable, temperature negative 17.
The observed winds aloft chart shows temperature, wind direction, and speed at selected stations. Arrows with pennants and barbs indicate wind direction and speed. Each pennant is 50 knots, each barb is 10 knots, and each half barb is 5 knots. Wind direction is shown by an arrow drawn to the nearest 10 degrees, with the second digit of the coded direction entered at the outer end of the arrow. Thus, a wind in the northwest quadrant with the digit 3 indicates 330 degrees, and a wind in the southwest quadrant with the digit 3 indicates 230 degrees.
Inflight Weather Advisories advise enroute pilots of the possibility of encountering hazardous flying conditions that may not have been forecast at the time of the preflight weather briefing.
AIRMETs (WA) contain information on weather that may be hazardous to single-engine and other light aircraft and VFR pilots. The items covered are moderate icing or turbulence, sustained winds of 30 knots or more at the surface, widespread areas of IFR conditions, and extensive mountain obscurement.
SIGMETs (WS) advise of weather potentially hazardous to all aircraft. The items covered are severe icing, severe or extreme turbulence, and widespread sandstorms, dust storms, or volcanic ash lowering visibility to less than 3 miles.
SIGMETs and AIRMETs are broadcast upon receipt and at 30-minute intervals (H + 15 and H + 45) during the first hour. If the advisory is still in effect after the first hour, an alert notice will be broadcast. Pilots may contact the nearest FSS to ascertain whether the advisory is pertinent to their flights.
Convective SIGMETs (WST) cover weather developments such as tornadoes, lines of thunderstorms, and embedded thunderstorms, and they also imply severe or greater turbulence, severe icing, and low-level wind shear. When a SIGMET forecasts embedded thunderstorms, it indicates that the thunderstorms are obscured by massive cloud layers and cannot be seen. Convective SIGMET bulletins are issued hourly at H + 55. Unscheduled convective SIGMETs are broadcast upon receipt and at 15-minute intervals for the first hour (H + 15; H + 30; H + 45).
When telephoning a weather briefing facility for preflight weather information, pilots should:
[10-2024]