Incorrect terminology
On Jan 15, 10:34*am, "Dave Liquorice" wrote:
In my own weather diary, when referring to gusts associated with showers
or thunderstorms, I always use Beaufort , eg "heavy shower, gusts to
force 7", or "gust to force 8 when cold front went through 2130Z".
Will I burn in hell for this?
I don't know but it might come back to haunt you is that "gust to force 8"
a 39mph gust or 46mph one? "Gusts to force 7" is that a few just above
32mph, most between 32 and 38 mph with none above 39,are there a few above
39, how many how far?
I'm not expecting precision, I normaly use low/mid/upper tens mph for gust
speeds.
--
Cheers * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
Dave. * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * pam is missing e-mail
I've no idea and not in the least bothered by it. I haven't got
an anemometer. For me the Beaufort force is a shorthand descriptive
term for a phenomenon generally observed through a window and may well
be in error. Too bad, but it's the best I can do and it's how I've
always thought of wind speeds. The same non-instrumental estimates
apply to rainfall rates and cloud heights.
Tudor Hughes, Warlingham, Surrey.
|