Greetings,
Well … I'd like to know this at least on the morning of the field trip. Of course the predicted winds are all we have to go on … yes? I’ve gone to a site according to the weather forecast … only to find the winds had veered or backed and the arrival and takeoff runways were changed accordingly. Having automotive transportation can overcome this in fairly short order. Not being that mobile … like moi who depends of public transportation and his own two feet … it’s quite another story.
I’m most familiar with LGA … since I live nearby … and I’ve seen takeoffs on runway 13 while arrivals were using runway 22 ... about a 90-degree shift in bearing. This is not unusual and can happen with other runway combos at LGA. Why these “split-runway” assignments?
Just yesterday (05/12) I was out at McNeil Park in College Point observing landings and takeoffs on runway 4 since the wind was from the NE. So I wanted to get over to Plane View Park off the Grand Central Parkway at the SW end of LGA runway 4 to catch those dramatic landings.
I had to take three buses to do this (Q25/65-Q66-Q33) via Flushing. Before I even reached Flushing I saw that takeoffs and landings were now using runway 22 … the exact opposite from 20-30 minutes earlier as the wind was now from the SW. So when I finally got to Plane View Park … I wasn’t seeing those dramatic lo-level landings … but far less exciting takeoffs.
Have any of you regulars developed a system … or systems … for coping with changing runway assignments? Does time of the day play a role here? What about the afternoon sea breeze effect that I feel even on the streets of Flushing ... but is much more prominent at JFK … as it’s much nearer the ocean?
Indeed … is there any way to predict/foresee changes in winds and runways assignments on a given day for LGA and JFK … the only airports I frequent?
Thanks,
Mike (shamrock838)



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