Runway 12 at KFST
Runway 12/30 at Fort Stockton Pecos County Airport (KFST) in Fort Stockton is a 7,508 ft, lighted, asphalt runway oriented 127°/307°. The runway is 100 ft wide. SkyMeter has observed 1 landings and 0 departures on this runway over the last 30 days, with approximately 0.0% of arrivals resulting in a go-around.
Runway 12/30 at Fort Stockton Pecos County Airport (KFST) in Fort Stockton is a 7,508 ft, lighted, asphalt runway oriented 127°/307°. The runway is 100 ft wide. SkyMeter has observed 1 landings and 0 departures on this runway over the last 30 days, with approximately 0.0% of arrivals resulting in a go-around.
Runway at a Glance
Arrival Volume
1 landings observed on Runway 12 in the last 30 days, alongside 0 departures.
Limited Traffic Observed
SkyMeter has observed very few flights using Runway 12 in the last 30 days. Statistical breakdowns (go-around rate, crosswind averages) need more observations to be meaningful.
Peak Hour
Busiest landing window observed at 14:00 with 3 arrivals on the recent sample.
Prevailing Wind & Gust History
Over the past 365 days, winds at KFST have prevailed from the south-southeast (150°), accounting for roughly 29% of windy observations. Average wind speed sits at 8.8 kt with peak gusts to 74 kt. Strong-wind days are infrequent here.
Hourly Landing Distribution
Recent observed landings on Runway 12 grouped by hour-of-day (UTC).
Approach Types and Categories
Aircraft approach runways using different procedures based on weather conditions, visibility, and available navigation equipment. An Instrument Landing System (ILS) approach provides precision horizontal and vertical guidance using ground-based radio signals, enabling aircraft to land in low visibility conditions. Visual approaches require pilots to maintain visual contact with the runway and surrounding terrain, typically used during clear weather. Area Navigation (RNAV) approaches use GPS technology to guide aircraft along specific flight paths.
Approach Categories Explained
Category (CAT) classifications define minimum visibility and decision height requirements for instrument approaches. Higher categories enable operations in lower visibility conditions.
Wind and Environmental Factors
Wind conditions directly impact runway operations, influencing approach difficulty, landing performance, and runway selection. Runway 12 benefits from favorable wind alignment, with prevailing winds creating minimal crosswind components for most operations. Average wind speeds of 12 knots pose no operational constraints for commercial aircraft.
24-Hour Wind Pattern
Wind patterns show typical diurnal variation with stronger winds during midday hours.