Conditions were bright and sunny for both stages, with the riders being helped up the last part of Norwood Edge by a strong tailwind. |
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It was fast, mostly downhill, and mother nature was good enough to hold the rain off and afford us a light tailwind. |
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A tailwind had brought the aircraft into the airport quicker than expected. |
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A flight arrives at London airport six days late, although the pilot believes his plane is half an hour early due to a tailwind. |
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A slight crosswind changing to a steady tailwind greeted rowers and spectators alike. |
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With sails raised proudly, we continued south carried by a tailwind on gentle swells. |
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When all the conditions are meet, and there is perhaps a favourable wind, or a tailwind, then set sail. |
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The riders must be hoping for a tailwind blowing in from the coast and up the valley. |
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Paddling hard, assisted by the ferocious tailwind and strong current, we could sometimes outpace sailboats. |
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The quartering tailwind was not favorable for the landing runway, but it was nothing we hadn't dealt with before. |
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Without even knowing how thick the snow cover on the runway was, the captain was determined to land there, even with a slight tailwind. |
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But Bush loathing has picked up a strong anti-American tailwind, one that the loathers are not unafraid to exploit. |
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An aircraft flying into such a column experiences a headwind, followed by a downdraft and then a tailwind. |
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Mitt Romney blew into South Carolina on a New Hampshire tailwind and a Republican field that could do no right. |
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Reports indicated that, on arrival at Chicago, there was poor braking action and there was a tailwind component of greater than 5 knots. |
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Departing in the tailwind also increased the likelihood of the helicopter encountering down-flowing air over the rim of the escarpment. |
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It is not known if the timing of this decision contributed to the omission of the tailwind during the calculation of landing performance. |
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In the descent, the pilot had not taken into consideration the strong tailwind component which modified the descent slope of the aircraft. |
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The table below contains the landing-distance values with the 10-knot tailwind correction applied. |
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We wish to take advantage of this tailwind for the Berlin Declaration, too. |
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Also, the tailwind component and the wet surface increased the landing roll distance. |
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Just before touchdown, the winds began to shift to a quartering tailwind from the left. |
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Failing that, limit downwind approaches to a tailwind component of 15 knots. |
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The strong tailwind with blowing snow conditions would have given the crew the illusion of moving slower than they were actually moving. |
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Sustainable post-recession equity bull markets usually require a vigorous tailwind, which is why the rallies of 1981 and 2002 proved to be head fakes. |
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With a tailwind, fuel can be economized with a straight-line route. |
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There was an icy tailwind and blowing mist as she, Amy, and Pat began to pick up too much speed descending the long hill down the backside of the Tehachapi pass. |
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The wind was quite variable during the course of the day, with a 20 km easterly tailwind at the start, turning southerly and reducing as the day progressed. |
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While crossing the runway threshold and during much of the landing roll, the aircraft was subjected to an average tailwind component of about 15 knots, thereby increasing the stopping distance. |
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And with such a tailwind, it is extraordinary how the League remains stuck in a divisive politics based on personal grievances that go back nearly four decades. |
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In the long run, this could prove ruinous, as we argued in a leader on the anniversary of Black Monday, but this belief should serve as a tailwind for the next few years. |
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Therefore, when the engine failed completely, the pilot was faced with executing an autorotation with a strong tailwind, over a relatively featureless surface. |
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It is not known with certainty why the pilot elected to land on runway 28 with a tailwind rather than land straight-in on runway 10 with a headwind. |
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On the other hand, the Göteborg decision gives the candidate countries' parliaments and governments the necessary political tailwind to mobilise the whole country and confront the doubters, and doubters there are. |
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Given the tailwind component a few seconds before touchdown and the wet runway, the flight crew was in a situation where it almost could not depart from the ideal landing profile. |
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This tendency probably came about as a combination of the tailwind and the underfoot conditions. |
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With a tailwind, there was negative margin, which would mean an overrun. |
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The derived winds indicated a significant tailwind component for the initial seven minutes of the emergency descent, followed by light headwinds for the remainder of this particular descent and approach. |
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After the plane passes through the downdraft in the center of the microburst, it is swept by a tailwind, which robs the plane of lift. |
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The economic climate provides a tailwind that can help us to remove structural defects, to step up the liberalisation drive and to rise boldly to the challenges posed by demographic trends. |
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During the descent for the first approach, the tailwind modified the descent slope and the aircraft was too high and too fast to intercept the localizer course. |
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Saudi Arabia seems willing to tolerate even lower prices to protect its market share, so the boost may last. The other, even stronger, tailwind is growing incomes. |
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We made good time on the flight back because we had a tailwind. |
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Tailwind landings have you flying down final at an excess groundspeed, but at a given angle of descent. |
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Reminiscent of the great American masters, Tailwind should and will be included as a fundamental part of America's heritage. |
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Tailwind said this is a new route and is not serviced by any existing seaplane operator. |
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Tailwind Airlines will operate with a starting team of 125 personnel and a fleet of three Boeing 737-400 aircraft. |
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