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Cloudiest UK sites with "good" horizon visibility?
It's probably been answered before - what are the cloudiest UK sites
that have 30-year averages, or at least fairly long records? Someone on another forum cited Kinlochewe from the Met. tables, but I understand it has significant daylight loss. |
Cloudiest UK sites with "good" horizon visibility?
"RWood" wrote : It's probably been answered before - what are the cloudiest UK sites that have 30-year averages, or at least fairly long records? Someone on another forum cited Kinlochewe from the Met. tables, but I understand it has significant daylight loss. Yes, the trouble is that the climatologically cloudiest parts of the UK and Ireland are those very areas where most stations have poor horizons (and, yes, Kinlochewe among them). Of low level sites I guess Baltasound (on Unst in Shetland) averages (CS) about 1020 hours per year; higher up, Great Dun Fell, some 850m up in the northern Pennines, had an average (again, CS) of just under 1000 hours though how much used to be lost through rime/ice accretion on the sunshine recorder is anyone's guess. There's one site in the Irish Republic which averages under 1000 hours (sorry, can't lay my hands on the details) but I believe it, too, has a messy horizon. Philip |
Cloudiest UK sites with "good" horizon visibility?
On Oct 1, 11:04*am, "Philip Eden" philipATweatherHYPHENukDOTcom
wrote: "RWood" wrote : It's probably been answered before - what are the cloudiest UK sites that have 30-year averages, or at least fairly long records? Someone on another forum cited Kinlochewe from the Met. tables, but I understand it has significant daylight loss. Yes, the trouble is that the climatologically cloudiest parts of the UK and Ireland are those very areas where most stations have poor horizons (and, yes, Kinlochewe among them). Of low level sites I guess Baltasound (on Unst in Shetland) averages (CS) about 1020 hours per year; higher up, Great Dun Fell, some 850m up in the northern Pennines, had an average (again, CS) of just under 1000 hours though how much used to be lost through rime/ice accretion on the sunshine recorder is anyone's guess. There's one site in the Irish Republic which averages under 1000 hours (sorry, can't lay my hands on the details) but I believe it, too, has a messy horizon. Philip Thanks Philip! Sounds as if about 1000 hours is a reasonable cutoff for open lowland locations. A lot more though than the 640 hours (1941-1995) at our Campbell Island! (interesting for its sub-Antarctic wildlife however). |
Cloudiest UK sites with "good" horizon visibility?
On Sep 30, 11:04*pm, "Philip Eden" philipATweatherHYPHENukDOTcom
wrote: "RWood" wrote : It's probably been answered before - what are the cloudiest UK sites that have 30-year averages, or at least fairly long records? Someone on another forum cited Kinlochewe from the Met. tables, but I understand it has significant daylight loss. Yes, the trouble is that the climatologically cloudiest parts of the UK and Ireland are those very areas where most stations have poor horizons (and, yes, Kinlochewe among them). Of low level sites I guess Baltasound (on Unst in Shetland) averages (CS) about 1020 hours per year; higher up, Great Dun Fell, some 850m up in the northern Pennines, had an average (again, CS) of just under 1000 hours though how much used to be lost through rime/ice accretion on the sunshine recorder is anyone's guess. There's one site in the Irish Republic which averages under 1000 hours (sorry, can't lay my hands on the details) but I believe it, too, has a messy horizon. Philip It is certainly cloudy on GDF - that's were I did my PhD measuring clouds - weighing them no less :-) |
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