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Wildswimmer Pete

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Posts posted by Wildswimmer Pete

  1. At 2pm  according to my garden sensor it was 30C, while Liverpool ATIS was reporting 28C with a DP of 16C, so obviously not humid.  Temp in my garden peaked at 36C, now currently 31C.  Liverpool ATIS reporting 30C with DP 19C @ 17:00Z (ie 6pm BST).  A cloudless day up to now but now patchy Sc.

  2. 7 hours ago, Matthew Wilson said:

    Major similarities! Even the moon phase is the same as last year. Day 2 of the Full moon(fullest moon) was 1st July 2015 (hottest day) and 19th July 2016 (predicted hottest day) has the same full moon phase 2(fullest moon). Ive heard rumors that people change when theres a full moon but could the weather also:cc_confused: could be a remarkable coincidence of course:D

    It's true.  Domestic violence and road accidents peak roughly four days after new and full moon.  There obviously is a connection between moon phase and tidal effects on the human body. After all we are basically leaky bags of water.  Does anyone have any other explanation as to why the feminine reproduction cycle is 28 days, one lunar month?

    • Like 3
  3. The expected forecast for here didn't materialise, instead the usual damp, chilly cloudfest with the sun making an appearance just now, again as expected to lead to yet another unseasonably cold night.  Tomorrow? I'm not holding my breath.  As for the forecast 30C on Tuesday I've got binoculars ready to watch the 633 Porcine Squadron flapping past. 

    • Like 1
  4. While yesterday felt like summer, today is back to October.  We had to go to Glasgow and when we arrived around 7:30am the weather typically Glaswegian - grey and chilly.  However coming coming back down through the Southern Uplands the drizzle began (again quite normal) however dropping down into England the expected clearance didn't happen and crossing Shap we were in up in thick cloud,  from there on the rain increased in intensity through the Lakes, Lancashire and Manchester, the rain only let up when we got back home in Runcorn around 2pm.  Again a case of October in July. Meanwhile the expected warmth expected this weekend has well and truly been kicked into the long grass with a scorchio 16C expected - sadly you can't make it up.:nonono::cold:

    • Like 1
  5. 18 minutes ago, Evening thunder said:

    I don't disagree but I can only go off the stats really (though I'd rather do that than selective memory.. which I can suffer from myself), and for sunshine they don't really seem to show anything out of line with what has happened before (excluding this summer which does seem pretty bad so far and is not shown on the sources I posted yet).

    To quote the old saw: there are lies, damn lies and then there are statistics.  The sunshine figures don't even show half of the truth.  Under the conditions we've experienced the past few years, most of any sunshine is during the small hours before the inevitable  grey lid slams down.  Those of us who are up and about during conventional waking hours see little or no sun, hence the prevalence of SAD which shouldn't be a problem through the summer months.  Sunshine recorders record ALL sunshine whereas what interests most of us is sensible sunshine, to borrow Nouska's excellent term.

    • Like 5
  6. 1 hour ago, cheeky_monkey said:

    Because this forum must be the most negative moan fest known to man..a more miserable bunch I have not come across...however I do take task about that the UK has the most varied and interesting climate in the world..i would definitely give that to the central belt of the US and Canada

    Probably because a lot of us are beginning to show the symptoms of SAD.

     

    • Like 2
  7. 1 hour ago, stainesbloke said:

    Yes, we should be more grateful and realise how lucky we are with our current climate. It could be far worse. The other day I actually witnessed 5 minutes of sunshine. The  constant howling wind also dropped below a Force 5 for 15 minutes. Must be grateful for the variety and realise 'it's not that bad'.....

    Be careful! I was recently castigated for using "The howling wind" as a throwaway remark.

    • Like 2
  8. Unfortunately I've had to endure more lousy British summers that I'd like to think about but the outstanding grotfests that come to mind are 1962 (awful), 1963 (slightly less awful) 1986 and 1987 (for being so cold and showery).  However still being miserable they all saw some usable sunshine.  The past few summers have been increasingly cloudy with temps. like you'd expect in October.  As I've said elsewhere, during the past few summers any sun has been in the small hours before most of us wake up and by the time it's breakfast time the grey lid has slammed down until the evening when it melts away to leave another cold night.  We could do with a type of sunshine recorder that only records sun during the waking hours to get a better picture. 

    Does anybody know the underlying cause of all this cloudiness? 

    • Like 1
  9. 10 hours ago, stainesbloke said:

    I agree with you, it could always be worse. 2012, for example. Doesn't mean I have to like weeks and weeks of cloud, wind and rain or drizzle. I'm not alone either; everyone I know, whether friends, family, work colleagues, fellow allotment holders etc are all moaning and fed up. It doesn't have to be massively hot; some clear skies and light winds would be lovely. It's the relentless Atlantic vileness that just won't quit that's getting me down. Where's the variety that our climate is famous for?

    Same here. Woke up at 7am to blue skies, 8:30am the grey lid has well and truly slammed down.

    • Like 2
  10. Awful day that wouldn't be out of place in late October or November.  Felt very chilly when I went out in the afternoon (in fleece-lined hoodie and knee shorts) explained by the miserable 14C breeze.  Moderate to heavy rain that began in the early hours and kept up all morning.  Currently Liverpool ATIS reports 14C with DP 12C, showers in the vicinity, pressure 1009mb.  Currently dry, roads still wet, the breeze has dropped out, I'd say now F1,

  11. 2 hours ago, markyo said:

    Sorry where was the howling gale??? Spent today working in Liverpool ,breezy yes but howling gale,no. Agree the rain was a tad heavy but nothing uncommon. Temps could have been higher but not that bad at all in my opinion. Trust me a howling gale is something i doubt you or many will have experienced,i have worked up on the north coast of Scotland late Autumn,thats a howling gale when you can't stand up or close the car door! But i understand that your personal view,your gale is a breeze to me,your lovely hot weather is a pain to me,each to their own. Hope it clears soon for something more to your liking.

    Never heard of the "figure of speech"? The term "throwaway remark". This wasn't a formal weather report. "Trust me a howling gale is something i doubt you or many will have experienced,"  How presumptuous.  For your information I have experienced Force 11 gales in the past. "i have worked up on the north coast of Scotland"  I was brought up on the windy Wirral coast - meanwhile the name of the nearby (to me) town Helsby is a contraction of Hell's Bay.  I've also observed the weather for over 60 (SIXTY!) years.

    • Like 2
  12. At lunchtime on what is alleged to be a high summer day, according to Liverpool ATIS temp 15C and cloud base at 800ft.  Incredibly dark for the middle of the day.  Heavy rain all morning and now what feels like a cold, howling gale.  Really couldn't make it up.

  13. 3 hours ago, B87 said:

    The last decade has seen average sunshine amounts down by 50-60 hrs per month in summer, along with terrible temps in August.  Heathrow has seen 5 of it's 10 cloudiest Augusts on record since 2006.

     

    Bear in mind much of any sunshine recorded during this and the past few "summers" occurs during the small hours.  Unless you are working shifts or nights, for those of us who are up and about during conventional waking hours (8am to 9pm) the grey lid has already slammed down only to melt away approaching sunset leading to yet another unseasonably cold night.

    Never mind the green snot on the thickness charts, what really bothers me is the appearance of the blue patches, together with the possibility of SNOW showers at the tops of the Scottish mountains in bloody JULY!!!!:nonono:  

    Looks like I need to unpack my new SAD light which I shouldn't normally need until October.  Mind you the British climate seems to have degenerated into a permanent autumn. 

    • Like 4
  14. Yet another British "summer" grotfest.  Currently so dark I need room lights, light rain, Liverpool ATIS reporting 17C (here also 17C) with DP 15C.  Pressure 1007mb.  Another chilly, overcast day.  Whatever happened to the warmer, sunnier conditions expected for later this week? If anything conditions now are even worse.  Fine, warmer weather is always promised in 3-5 days' time, but tomorrow never comes.   It's not just a case of "jam tomorrow", I'd like at least some butter on our current dry, stale bread.

    • Like 1
  15. 1 hour ago, hillbilly said:

    Starting to look ominous now for July and with no very good Augusts for 13 years I can see why some are writing this summer off.We have had a shocking run with only 2 very good summer months out of the last 30 and two very poor summers[08 and 12] of which I have not experienced.Does anyone know what weather was like in the 60's which had 10 years without anything spectacular,it is ok looking at statistics but they only really give you an idea? Looks like am going to have to think about a holiday abroad next year,it really is starting to get depressive now !

    I lived through the Sixties (I was a teenager), the summers here on the Wirral were typically mixed.  However I remember 1962 and '63 were awful, basically same as we have experienced this past four or five years.  Of course That Winter was the filling of that unpleasant sandwich.  Summer 1959 was a scorcher and we had to wait until 1975 for the next hot one, followed by the record summer of '76. For some reason (possibly subconscious - I was only 12 at the time) I won't holiday in the Lake District -  the appalling summer of '62 put me off the area for life.

  16. The past few years August has become an Autumn month.  Meanwhile Summer 2016 now appears to be stillborn.  The past three or four weeks wouldn't have been out of place in October or even November.  A total washout together with non-ending cloudfest.

    • Like 2
  17. On 6/26/2016 at 11:04, h2005__uk__ said:

    Hi

    Does anyone know where the temperature sensor (or thermistor?) is located in the transmitter module for the Fine Offset WH1080 weather station?

    See attached an image of its insides. I thought it may be the white square component but that's actually for humidity.

    Thanks!

    IMG_20160626_104122573.jpg

    Look at the sub-PCB and notice the "NTC" in the upper right. NTC means Negative Temperature Coefficient ie a thermistor. The thermistor will be mounted under the sub-PCB. 

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