ASOS RPTING.
Synopsis
ASOS RPTING.
Narrative
I RECENTLY SENT IN A FORM REQUESTING THE NEED FOR A HUMAN WX OBSERVER AT THE DEN ARPT. THE ASOS SYS WE'RE USING NOW RARELY; IF EVER; SHOWS ANY SIGNIFICANT REMARKS. VIRGA; CUMULUS; TWRING CUMULUS; ETC. TODAY WE HAD ANOTHER EXAMPLE OF THE COMPROMISE OF SAFETY THAT OCCURS ON A DAILY BASIS. DURING OUR AFTERNOON WAVE OF TSTM ACTIVITY; A FUNNEL CLOUD WAS SPOTTED 6 MI N BY A CU-58 DEPARTING TO CYS. PREVIOUS TO THE FUNNEL CLOUD WE HAD LEVEL 6 TSTMS THROUGHOUT THE DEN AREA. THE FUNNEL COULD LATER DSNDED AND BECAME A TORNADO. IT LASTED APPROX 10 MINS. THE ONLY THING THAT SHOWED UP ON THE ASOS WAS WHEN THE RAIN FROM THE STORM CAME THROUGH. A BUSY LEVEL 5 FACILITY LIKE DEN DOES REALLY NEED A HUMAN WX OBSERVER. MY GUESS IS THAT WE ARE THE ONLY LEVEL 5 IN THE NATION THAT RELIES ON A MACHINE TO TAKE OUR WX OBSERVATION. CALLBACK CONVERSATION WITH RPTR REVEALED THE FOLLOWING INFO: RPTR'S CONCERN IS NOT SO MUCH THE ACCURACY OF THE ASOS BUT THE LACK OF DATA IT SUPPLIES IN REMARKS AND THE FACT THAT THE CONTRACT WX PEOPLE DO NOT ADD THEIR OWN REMARKS WHEN APPROPRIATE. RPTR HAS SPOKEN TO HIS SUPVR REGARDING THIS PROB.
Source: NASA Aviation Safety Reporting System (public domain). Reports are voluntary submissions and are not verified by NASA.