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RichardW2

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Posts posted by RichardW2

  1. Lincoln (UK) July 2009 Latitude 53° 13'49.80N

    July

    Valid 1st- 31st July, 2009

    Highest Temperature: 27.8°C/82°F (1st)

    Lowest Temperature: 9.9°C/49.8°F (10th)

    Mean Maximum: 21.1c/70f

    Mean Minimum: 12.5c/54.5f

    Mean Temperature: 16.8c/62.2f

    ---------------------

    Lowest Maximum: 17.2c/63f (29th)

    Highest Minimum: 15.3c/59.5f (1st)

    ---------------------

    Precipitation: 93.6mm/3.69"

    Days with rain >1mm: 12

    Days with rain: 22

    Most in one day: 29mm/1.14" (29th)

    ---------------------

    Sunshine hours: 184.1 (Below average, again)

    Most in one day: 14.7 (2nd)

    Sunless days: 0

    ---------------------

    Average Pressure: 1011mb

    Highest: 1024mb (1st)

    Lowest: 999mb (22nd)

    ---------------------

    Days with Sleet/Snow: 0

    Days with Hail/Ice Pellets: 1 (24th)

    Days with Thunder heard/reported: 7 (6th, 9th, 14th, 23rd, 24th, 27th, 30th); 9 at nearby Waddington RAF base

    Days with Fog: 0

    It gets to July, then it doesn't stop raining. Wettest month of the year by far.

    Funny how in recent years from May - September sunshine hours go below the average each month and then back to normal by October.

  2. Hi Rich...have you more info on the El Nino effect....

    where about's are we in it...The Start or the End.......any more info on the subject..

    I often study the effect of the Storms in the USA with The Nino..

    any links for this for UK Storms and effects

    El Nino started only recently. As for its effects on the USA severe storm season there are no really conclusive correlations of El Nino to severe weather frequency apparently, apart from leading to dryer and warmer winter weather in the northern states and wetter cool weather in the south western states.

    Well I am personally moving back to Buxton Derbyshire tomorrow, the place where there have been about 2 storms in 4 years of me living there. Boooo.

  3. We have had a number of heavy thundery showers this year here but no organised outbreaks of storms like in 2006/2007 and years before. Yesterdays was quite fun though with the vicious rainstorm and hail.

    I once did a study on El Nino and thunderstorms and there is a loose correlation between the frequency and intensity of thunderstorm outbreaks in the UK and El Nino, so hopefully the developing El Nino at the moment will stimulate more thunderstorm activity over the next year or so as data indicates that there is a trend. We might finally get some good storms for most everyone instead of just "hit or miss" thundery showers.

  4. Small thunderstorm with about 7-10 discharges with close audible thunder and nearby precip core about 14:00.

    Thundery shower with extremely heavy torrential rain and strong wind followed with up to 5-6mm hail stones approx. 17:00. 4 observed near-overhead discharges with thunder.

  5. Wow what can I say this has been the best day of the year for convective weather so far.

    We had a second storm pass over with INCREDIBLE torrential rain and then hail near the back edge for a couple of minutes and overhead IC lightning/thunder. The rain was horizontal and so heavy some car alarms went off. WICKED.

    Also I was outside going to Morrisons and watched this storm go from just a small TCU on the horizon to a storm.

  6. Why are people saying the main rain will miss Hull and the NE? What charts are you looking at?! The centre of the LP track is across the region! and stalling, bringing more rainfall totals, we will miss the storms tonight yes, but tomorrow these areas are high at risk, just look at the METOFFICE! warnings.

    All-in-All looking very impressive for SE and Central belt of S england tonight! Kent's gunna get battered <_<

    Because they mistakenly believe it is all going "linear" in a straight line to the north east of the UK, which it isn't. It is spinning around the low pressure area, hence the rain band will be stalling over eastern England

  7. Got to laugh at how we have a nice warm and sunny spring then come to July and it changes to very cold, overcast and suddenly forecasts of torrential and prolonged rainfall. Apart from the first week it will end up being a repeat of July 2007.

    Forecasts of 13/14c maximum temperatures on 18th and 19th. Joke? Unfortunately not. Most places below the 50th parallel don't even have night time lows that cold in summer. Stupid England, crap and I can't wait to leave it for good some time in the next few years.

  8. I think you've built up a picture in your head that it has to feel warm and humid for there to be a thunderstorm, which totally wrong and misguided. :good:

    It would be, but no I don't believe that at all. I am well researched/educated in storms and have witnessed storms when it is snowing too. It just appears there is a lot less humidity here than other areas and this would weaken existing storms moving into dryer air.

    I suppose I am frustrated at not having experienced a single storm all year.

  9. The NSC Club Rules.

    Members take note ,here are the rules for the NSC as requested:

    A Thunderstorm in the NSC is classed as follows:

    1. You must have a thunderstorm directly overhead or very very close by.

    2. A Thunderstorm has to last at least 15 minutes plus. (distant ones do not count)

    3. Funnel clouds,Tornadoes,Cgs,any of these is a bonus lol

    Here is a copy of the membership

    I hereby solemnly swear that I (*RichardW2*) have not witnessed a single storm so far this year in 2009.

    And that if a storm decides to show up and surprise me I will be more then happy to resign my membership and notify the NSC immediately.

    Your siggy here........ *RichardW2*

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