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Post by Beercules on Apr 1, 2021 20:10:53 GMT -5
Obviously Windsor. Those legitimate 52C heat indicies won me over. Canadian humidexes are usually seen as a massive joke. Way too high compared to actual temp most of the time. I'll go with Windsor as well. Hence my "legitimate" remark. The BOM's "feels like" temps are the same bullshit in reverse. For example, the air temp is 35C, dewpoint -10C or something, with a 50km/h wind, the feels like is apparently 22C. lmao
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Post by Morningrise on Apr 1, 2021 22:26:05 GMT -5
Windsor all the way, one of my all-time favorite climates Canadian humidexes are usually seen as a massive joke. Way too high compared to actual temp most of the time. I'll go with Windsor as well. Hence my "legitimate" remark. The BOM's "feels like" temps are the same bullshit in reverse. For example, the air temp is 35C, dewpoint -10C or something, with a 50km/h wind, the feels like is apparently 22C. lmao The Canadian humidex is definitely a bit of a joke, but Windsor legitimately gets some pretty intense temperature/dew point combos during summer heatwaves. That 52C humidex was set on June 20th, 1953 with an air temperature of 35.0C and dew point of 28.9C. They've managed to crack the 50C humidex mark in recent years as well, like on July 21st, 2011 when they had a 37.2C air temperature with a 25.3C dew point (and they had a 26.5C low on that day). Windsor also has the warmest average summer lows in Canada, the most thunderstorm activity by far (averaging 50.1 days per year of lightning), and the mildest winters outside of BC. All around a real winner by Canadian standards.
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Post by tommyFL on Apr 1, 2021 22:35:43 GMT -5
That's still a 51 C heat index using the American method, so really not that much of a botev
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Post by Beercules on Apr 2, 2021 0:24:33 GMT -5
That's still a 51 C heat index using the American method, so really not that much of a botev Sounds like the "American Method" is 100% bullshit aswell.
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