Durango Rebel wrote:The short question is if the OAT is 70 degrees F with a 10 knot x-wind does it feel different if than if the OAT 10 degrees F with the same wind?
Maybe this is a dumb question
It's not a dumb question, but maybe it's not quite the right question.
Perhaps it would be better to ask if a 10 knot crosswind at 10 degrees will have more or less of an effect on your touchdown and rollout than a 10 knot crosswind at 70 degrees.
Here's my take on it.
An anemometer doesn't know air density, it only knows how fast it's spinning, so even though the air molecules may have to move faster to spin it the same RPM at higher temperatures and lower densities, it will still FEEL the same to any FIXED object. If it said 50, you would have to lean into the wind the same amount at 10 degrees as at 100 degrees.
However, your aircraft is NOT a fixed object until it is completely stopped! Especially if it's a taildragger, what you are most concerned about in any crosswind landing is controllability versus the effect of the wind. If it's quite hot and you get slow, the controls will lose their effectiveness at a higher
groundspeed, and since the likelyhood of a groundloop goes up as the square of the
groundspeed, this is a bad situation. Also, as other folks have mentioned, hot air is just more squirelly, up, down or sideways.
On the other hand, the required amount of crosswind correction is a function of
airspeed, so a jet landing at 140 knots may handle a 40 knot crosswind, but an ultralight landing at 25 might only handle an 8 knot one. This means that your required
correction in degrees of crab will be less for 10 knots at 80 degrees than for 10 knots at 10 degrees. These two variables may somewhat cancel each other out during the approach and flare part of a landing, but once you are solidly on the ground the higher groundspeed at the higher temperatures takes precedence.
What this all means to me is that I will have higher chances of a poor landing in the same velocity of crosswind at lower air densities than at higher densities. This has been amply borne out in 39 years of experience...I have landed the 180 at sea level and 55 degrees with a solid
25 knots being reported, and although the crab angle was impressive, the touchdown and rollout were not
too scary

. I have also landed at 85 degrees at 8000 feet in a
10 knot crosswind, and the slight crab angle lulled me into a false sense of security, so that I almost lost the airplane during the rollout, before the tail came down. To me, the critical phase is always the rollout...if I'm going to lose it, it will be between a second or two after touching and before slowing to a taxi speed. Thus I am much more concerned with variables that affect that phase(such as groundspeed) rather than crab angles. Rudder and aileron effectiveness
most definitely affect the rollout, and my criteria for a go-around are whether or not I can maintain the wing low enough to stop the drift while having enough rudder to keep it straight after transitioning from the crab, not what the crab angle actually is, although that is a real good indicator of what will happen while you are trying to plant the upwind wheel. If I'm working too hard to keep straight and on centerline, I'd rather go-around before touchdown than after! I also carry a little more power and speed and plan on a much longer landing than normal.
Regardless of the physics of it, most of the variables at high temps and low air densities conspire
against you, and most of the variables at low temperatures and high air densities conspire
for you in the landing and rollout.
Watch out for all crosswinds when it's high, hot, and humid!
Rocky