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uk.sci.weather (UK Weather) (uk.sci.weather) For the discussion of daily weather events, chiefly affecting the UK and adjacent parts of Europe, both past and predicted. The discussion is open to all, but contributions on a practical scientific level are encouraged. |
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#1
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Hi all
Any sites out there that offer cloud height prediction? There are some that offer cloud cover prediction, but no height information. If the cloud is at, say, 10 000 feet but 8 octas, it is a LOT different from say, 1 000 feet 5-7 octas. Thanks in advance |
#2
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![]() John Smith wrote: Hi all Any sites out there that offer cloud height prediction? There are some that offer cloud cover prediction, but no height information. If the cloud is at, say, 10 000 feet but 8 octas, it is a LOT different from say, 1 000 feet 5-7 octas. Thanks in advance You'll find a cumulus base calculator at: http://www.csgnetwork.com/estcloudbasecalc.html Joe Wolverhampton |
#3
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![]() "Joe" wrote in message ... John Smith wrote: Hi all Any sites out there that offer cloud height prediction? There are some that offer cloud cover prediction, but no height information. If the cloud is at, say, 10 000 feet but 8 octas, it is a LOT different from say, 1 000 feet 5-7 octas. Thanks in advance You'll find a cumulus base calculator at: http://www.csgnetwork.com/estcloudbasecalc.html Joe Wolverhampton Cool link. Thanks. JS |
#4
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![]() John Smith wrote: Hi all Any sites out there that offer cloud height prediction? There are some that offer cloud cover prediction, but no height information. If the cloud is at, say, 10 000 feet but 8 octas, it is a LOT different from say, 1 000 feet 5-7 octas. Follow this link:- http://www.westwind.ch/?page=gfs3 then scroll down to the 'Low Clouds', 'Mid Clouds', 'High Clouds' sections. These will give you a *rough* idea of the model cloud output banding: low roughly below 7000ft, high roughly above 20000ft, mid in between (don't get too hung up by the height bands - these are *model* output remember, but will help you to decide whether the cloud is significant. An alternative (where available) is to use the Meteogram output (from the same GFS model) at:- http://www.wetterzentrale.de/topkarten/fsavnmgeur.html follow the links from "Diagramme", then "Europa", and set the second drop-down box to "Freie Atmosphare" ... then press 'Zeigen': this will give you output for a single location (set in the left hand box), with cloud apportioned again to low, medium or high levels. The beauty of this output is that you can judge for yourself the (rather gross) thickness of the model cloud (white shading = cloud), and cross-refer to the relative humidity structure (below - shaded green). HTH Martin. |
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