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Old February 11th 14, 11:33 AM posted to uk.sci.weather
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Default Rainfall since midnight over southern England

Hi

Here's a map of estimated rainfall accumulation for the period 0000-1030 UTC for today for southern England.

http://xmetman.wordpress.com/radar/s...accumulations/

In Mid-Devon we had 6 mm which is slightly over what the 15 minute radar produced. Obviously the more frequent the image the better the estimate and for this part of Devon it should be close.

Highest totals are in SW Wales and the Brecon Beacons with total in excess of 40 mm. I notice that the upper catchment area of the Thames around Cirencester have received an estimated ~8-10 mm.

The map shows a noticeable rain shadow to the lee of Dartmoor with the area around Okehampton having less than 2 mm. It would be interesting to know just how accurate my estimate is?

Now if only the UKMO (and why not the EA) made their hourly SREW rainfall data that they gather from their automatic rain gauges public! Which in the current climate (excuse the pun) would be a very sensible idea. Of course that'll never happen, with both organisations jealously guarding whats left of their monopoly on rain. I notice that there is already a request (by MeteoGroup) for SREW data which they made last year languishing on the data.gov site:

http://data.gov.uk/data-requests/rain-gauge-data

Bruce.

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Old February 11th 14, 11:52 AM posted to uk.sci.weather
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Default Rainfall since midnight over southern England

exmetman wrote:

Hi

Here's a map of estimated rainfall accumulation for the period 0000-1030 UTC
for today for southern England.

http://xmetman.wordpress.com/radar/s...accumulations/

In Mid-Devon we had 6 mm which is slightly over what the 15 minute radar
produced. Obviously the more frequent the image the better the estimate and
for this part of Devon it should be close.

Highest totals are in SW Wales and the Brecon Beacons with total in excess of
40 mm. I notice that the upper catchment area of the Thames around
Cirencester have received an estimated ~8-10 mm.

The map shows a noticeable rain shadow to the lee of Dartmoor with the area
around Okehampton having less than 2 mm. It would be interesting to know just
how accurate my estimate is?

Now if only the UKMO (and why not the EA) made their hourly SREW rainfall
data that they gather from their automatic rain gauges public! Which in the
current climate (excuse the pun) would be a very sensible idea. Of course
that'll never happen, with both organisations jealously guarding whats left
of their monopoly on rain. I notice that there is already a request (by
MeteoGroup) for SREW data which they made last year languishing on the
data.gov site:

http://data.gov.uk/data-requests/rain-gauge-data

Bruce.



The Met Office hourly SREW data is available in real-time on an annual
subscription basis. Also the hourly SYNOPs from the auxiliary network of AWS
i.e. those that don't have WMO station numbers.

--
Norman Lynagh
Tideswell, Derbyshire
303m a.s.l.
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Old February 11th 14, 12:28 PM posted to uk.sci.weather
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Default Rainfall since midnight over southern England

On Tuesday, February 11, 2014 11:33:02 AM UTC, exmetman wrote:
Hi



Here's a map of estimated rainfall accumulation for the period 0000-1030 UTC for today for southern England.



http://xmetman.wordpress.com/radar/s...accumulations/



In Mid-Devon we had 6 mm which is slightly over what the 15 minute radar produced. Obviously the more frequent the image the better the estimate and for this part of Devon it should be close.



Highest totals are in SW Wales and the Brecon Beacons with total in excess of 40 mm. I notice that the upper catchment area of the Thames around Cirencester have received an estimated ~8-10 mm.



The map shows a noticeable rain shadow to the lee of Dartmoor with the area around Okehampton having less than 2 mm. It would be interesting to know just how accurate my estimate is?



Now if only the UKMO (and why not the EA) made their hourly SREW rainfall data that they gather from their automatic rain gauges public! Which in the current climate (excuse the pun) would be a very sensible idea. Of course that'll never happen, with both organisations jealously guarding whats left of their monopoly on rain. I notice that there is already a request (by MeteoGroup) for SREW data which they made last year languishing on the data.gov site:



http://data.gov.uk/data-requests/rain-gauge-data



Bruce.


The total of only 1.5mm in my part of the Cotswolds, substantially less than I was expecting, agrees well with your map which estimated 2mm.

Dick Lovett

Charlbury (Oxfordshire Cotswolds) 122m
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Old February 11th 14, 07:34 PM posted to uk.sci.weather
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Default Rainfall since midnight over southern England

I wonder how much that subscription would cost?

And why aren't SREWs (and SFERIC messages come to that) just part of the Met Offices DataPoint web service and free?

We are only talking about 24 small text files a day...

I'm in the process of trying to find out exactly what it would cost.
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Old February 11th 14, 07:40 PM posted to uk.sci.weather
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Default Rainfall since midnight over southern England

On Tuesday, February 11, 2014 11:33:02 AM UTC, exmetman wrote:
Hi



Here's a map of estimated rainfall accumulation for the period 0000-1030 UTC for today for southern England.



http://xmetman.wordpress.com/radar/s...accumulations/



In Mid-Devon we had 6 mm which is slightly over what the 15 minute radar produced. Obviously the more frequent the image the better the estimate and for this part of Devon it should be close.



Highest totals are in SW Wales and the Brecon Beacons with total in excess of 40 mm. I notice that the upper catchment area of the Thames around Cirencester have received an estimated ~8-10 mm.



The map shows a noticeable rain shadow to the lee of Dartmoor with the area around Okehampton having less than 2 mm. It would be interesting to know just how accurate my estimate is?



Now if only the UKMO (and why not the EA) made their hourly SREW rainfall data that they gather from their automatic rain gauges public! Which in the current climate (excuse the pun) would be a very sensible idea. Of course that'll never happen, with both organisations jealously guarding whats left of their monopoly on rain. I notice that there is already a request (by MeteoGroup) for SREW data which they made last year languishing on the data.gov site:



http://data.gov.uk/data-requests/rain-gauge-data



Bruce.


8.4 mm in 5 inch gauge midnight to 1800z here.

Len
Wembury, SW Devon, 83 m asl


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Old February 11th 14, 10:44 PM posted to uk.sci.weather
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Default Rainfall since midnight over southern England

exmetman wrote:

I wonder how much that subscription would cost?

And why aren't SREWs (and SFERIC messages come to that) just part of the Met
Offices DataPoint web service and free?

We are only talking about 24 small text files a day...

I'm in the process of trying to find out exactly what it would cost.




2000 Euros per annum for the SREWS and the auxiliary station SYNOPs

--
Norman Lynagh
Tideswell, Derbyshire
303m a.s.l.


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