1987 uk storm
"Col" wrote in message
...
"Freddie" wrote in message
.. .
On Sat, 27 Aug 2011 12:02:48 +0100, Fonzy wrote:
cool, but what number was it?
Just about scraped a 1 for a short time.
Yes, that has long been my understanding of it.
A few very exposed south coast locations managed a 10-minute
mean of 72 mph..
But that's a *mean* wind speed of course. A gust to hurricane
strength is nothing unusual and ocurrs around coasts & hills every
year in winter, and isn't particualrly unusual in many inland areas
either.
This is the basis of much angst amoung metereologists when
people think a gust of around 30 mph constitutes a 'gale' when
in fact it's nothing of the sort, you need an average wind speed
of that to be classed as a gale, which is a whole different exprerience.
--
Col
I've only ever observed a lowland gale once and that was at Finningley in
1970. Put a beaufort letter "g" in the obs register - cool. I'd only just
passed my observers course as well! (And yes the ob was checked by a
supervisor before transmission). Unofficially I have only ever experienced
lowland gales a handful of times and most of those were on the coast. I've
experienced very few upland gales as well, certainly don't get that many
here in Haytor!
Cheers,
Will
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