Hi Peter,
Air movement is a complex business and in the situation you describe there'll be multiple factors at play: thermals, as well as temperature / pressure effects on your performance, plus residual turbulence and shear caused by the recent passage of the thunderstorm. In high humidity conditions you can even pick up a bit of carbie ice if you're not careful and that will definitely reduce your performance!
Yes, thermal updraughts will help your climb performance and retard your descent. In an updraught the air you're flying though is ascending. So climbing in an updraught is like walking up a moving up-escalator. To an observer you will ascend very quickly.
If you descend in an updraught, it's like walking down the up-escalator: you can step like mad but to an observer, you'll be descending much more slowly.
No, not really. Wet conditions do not necessarily mean no thermal updraughts. Thermals are triggered by thermal energy: surfaces get heated by the sun and cause uneven heating of air (e.g. the air over a concrete parking lot). The increasing temperature decreases the density of the air and this bubble of warmer air will start to "float" upwards through the relatively cooler, denser air until it reaches a height where it is the same temperature (and density) as the air around it. That's your updraught.
The opposite happens with cooler air. Cool air is denser than warm air and will tend to sink. Now, rain will have an indirect effect in that it tends to cool the air around it (which in turn causes regions of air to sink i.e. downdraughts). However, you can't rule out updraughts just because there is wet weather. You can still get significant thermal formation in wet and humid conditions.
The deciding factor is temperature. Thermal energy is what drives vertical air movement.
As far as aircraft performance is concerned, the main factors affecting performance are temperature and local pressure (e.g. the QNH). Of these two, temperature has the greater effect. They will significantly influence air density and it is air density that will fundamentally affect your performance.
So, the opposite to what you may be surmising is actually true: a warm day will retard overall performance rather than improve it - even if thermals give you a bit of a lift now and then.
Yes, but not for wet/dry conditions since humidity really doesn't have an appreciable effect.
Since it isn't possible to produce figures for all combinations of temperature and pressure, manufacturers calibrate their performance figures against theoretical performance in a standard atmosphere: the International Standard Atmosphere (ISA).
You can use these charts to predict performance but in order to use them you also need to somehow recalibrate the local conditions of the day into equivalent in ISA. This adjustment involves calculating a "density altitude" and there's more on this in the textbook.
Density altitude is basically the altitude in ISA where the air density is the same as the density of the air where you are now. You then use this density altitude to read off the expected performance from the performance charts.
On your example day, 22
oC and 1009 hPa parked up at Parafield, your elevation is 57 ft but your density altitude is actually 1017ft! The air you're going to be flying in is actually the same density as the air 1000ft higher in the theoretical standard atmosphere that the manufacturer used in the chart.
If you want to predict your performance for that day, you wouldn't use the figures on the charts for your actual altitude; you would have to use the figures for 1000ft higher than that. So, if you're in the circuit at 1000ft your aircraft will behave as if it's actually at 2000ft!
To summarise then, getting back to your questions:
* On a warm day, thermal updraughts will indeed affect your climb and descent but they are only transient local conditions and you can't plan on them.
* High humidity will theoretically reduce your performance but really nothing worth writing home about. Temperature is the main factor.
* Yes you can use charts to predict your expected performance on the day but you need to calculate a density altitude for your local conditions and use that in the manufacturers charts. These figures will ignore the effects of humidity.
Hope that helps
Cheers,
Rich