Recent
No recent locations yet.
Capital city
National / States

Ribbon No. 6 Reef Rain Radar - 50km

Loading map
Use the icon for quick access to locations
National & State Rain Radars
Capital City Rain Radars

About the Ribbon No. 6 Reef Rain Radar

Saddle Mountain

The Cairns radar is situated approximately 9km north-northwest of Cairns airport at Saddle Mountain (also known as Bunda Gawan by the Djabugay people) on the Kuranda range at a height of 652m. The radar has good visibility in all directions, though does have some limitations to the south-southeast looking over Mt Bellenden Ker (1593m) and Mt Bartle Frere (1622m) at approximately 40 and 60km respectively. Good radar coverage can be expected from as far north as Cooktown, as far south as Tully and reaching inland areas such as Chillagoe. In optimal conditions coverage may extend as far as 250km from the radar, and possibly further out to sea for distant tropical cyclones. The radar is well sited for detecting tropical cyclones over the Coral Sea as they approach the Cairns coastal area, and for tracking thunderstorms approaching from inland parts. During the winter months when the southeasterly trade winds are active the radar detects most coastal shower activity. Low level drizzle can however go undetected, especially in the few kilometers immediately adjacent to the radar due to the radar beam overshooting the top of the cloud and precipitation. The Doppler capability of this radar provides enhanced detection of the potential for damaging winds from thunderstorms, and can also detect wind changes such as sea breezes. During windy conditions and when rough seas are present the Doppler radar output can be affected by 'sea clutter' as the sea surface reflects 'sidelobes' of the radar beam, though echoes from actual precipitation are usually discernible in animated image loops. Large ships may also occasionally appear in radar images as moving arcs of reflectivity. Heavy rain over the radar site may on very rare occasions cause attenuation of all signals. Path attenuation can also occur when the radar beam passes through an intense thunderstorm cell, reducing the returned signal from cells further along that path. When rain from cloud bands does not reach the ground (known as virga) there may be indications of rainfall that appears to dissipate as it approaches the radar. Apart from these limitations, the radar gives a generally good representation of rainfall intensity and highly reliable detection of severe weather threats. <a
Warnings
No warnings within 100 km.
State Wide
Temperature
Ribbon No. 6 Reef
24 °C 24 °C 10am 25 °C 11pm
↑ Warming
Now: 24 °C
Tides
Ribbon No. 6 Reef
9:00am 1.04m 2:02pm 1.42m
↑ Rising
Current: 1.22m
Weather Now for Ribbon No. 6 Reef
Observations not available
Nearby Wind
50 km radius
Wind Observations Offline
Recent Locations
Ribbon No. 6 Reef
9 kn ESE
26°
North Walpole
5 kn NNE
12°
Bridge Creek -
Carlisle River
7 kn WSW
13°
Leichardt
10 kn SSW
13°
Forest Lodge
7 kn WNW
18°
Sun
6:42am rise 5:55pm set
11 h 13 m of daylight
Now: 11:28am
2 seconds less than yesterday
Moon
11:01am rise 11:07pm set
30% illuminated
Waxing Crescent
Live Weather
Nearby
Cooktown, QLD
9 kn ESE
26°
Cape Flattery, QLD
16 kn SSE
26°
Windiest in Australia
Bedout Island, WA
34 kn ESE
20°
Most Windless in Australia
Bunbury (Coastal), WA
Calm
10°
Hottest in Australia
Cape Wessel, NT
19 kn SE
30°
Coldest in Australia
Mount Wellington, TAS
16 kn SSW
Wettest in Australia
Ferny Creek, VIC
6.4 mm
Return To Classic site 😭
Or... let us know if a problem, so we can tweak! 😅