rickair7777 said:
Personally, I wouldn't try it without on-board gear, but I have no operational experience with or feel for NEXRAD capabilities either.
We've recently upgraded both our 530's in our CJ2's to have the Nexrad capabilities, and so far I'm not that impressed. It certainly has its value, but I don't know that I'd stake me and my families life on it in a single-engine piston.
The pro's of it is that you can "look ahead" far beyond the range of your aircrafts wx radars, and get a good idea of whats happening up ahead, and/or if the storms are getting worse or better. However, the farther you zoom out, the "detail" of the storms of course get worse. Also, Nexrad images come in pixels, and doesn't allow for great detailing of a storm up ahead.
Couple times we've painted a storm 75-100 miles ahead with our wx radar, and got a rather different "paint" on it then what the Nexrad image was showing us. That's another problem with inflight Nexrad, the images are often 4-5 minutes old. A lot can change in a charged-up storm in 5 minutes. Completely different developments, intensity can change dramatically, etc.
And DeeMee... the first questions already been answered well, so I'll throw my .02 in on the second question. Generally a late afternoon thunderstorm is going to explode rather intensely. I wouldn't think you'd have to be more then 2 or 3,000 feet up in the air to see it nicely. It jsut depends how far away from you it is, and how high the storm has built up. But believe me, if you can see it from the ground, you'll see it nicely in the air.