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Post by fairweatherfan on Aug 15, 2022 19:32:26 GMT -5
So Darjeeling was Wikipedia's featured article yesterday. It has a very interesting climate. The weather box has an interesting color scheme too. It's very bad in my opinion, I'll rate it a D-. It's very hard to feel warm in this climate. During the summer, you'll get soaked and burnt to a crisp at the same time.
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Post by ๐๐ฟMรถrรถn๐๐ฟ on Aug 15, 2022 21:06:10 GMT -5
A C climate for me.
The wet season would be a bit annoying but the drier months look very nice (basically every month besides June - Sep).
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Post by Steelernation on Aug 15, 2022 21:17:37 GMT -5
E+. Pleasant most of the year but summer is disgusting and no real warmth
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Post by greysrigging on Aug 15, 2022 22:41:44 GMT -5
No more than a C+ due to the cold winters....sensational monsoonal rainfall pattern !
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Post by deneb78 on Aug 15, 2022 23:16:29 GMT -5
C- winters too chilly and way too much rainfall during the monsoon. India has way better climates.
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Post by Ethereal on Aug 16, 2022 1:16:32 GMT -5
E+
UV rays might make it feel warmer? Other than way too chilly and cloudy.
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Post by cawfeefan on Aug 16, 2022 1:44:31 GMT -5
D+, summers are too cool and wet
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Post by Cheeseman on Aug 16, 2022 6:18:19 GMT -5
F
No interest for me in a climate that doesn't even have a month with room temperature average highs, and has never seen 90 F (32 C) on record.
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Post by MET on Aug 16, 2022 6:33:18 GMT -5
C. The temperatures are excellent, but it's let down by the monsoon rainfall season.
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Post by Beercules on Aug 16, 2022 6:58:08 GMT -5
F horrifying cold wet mouldy skin penetrating corona snot blob permanent overcast dungeon. That colour scheme is cancer too.
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Post by ilmc90 on Aug 16, 2022 18:43:09 GMT -5
C+
Very comfortable temperatures year-round and good rainfall but would be annoyed with the lack of dry summer days.
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Post by desiccatedi85 on Aug 17, 2022 7:52:36 GMT -5
F+, that crummer monsoon is among the worst in the world. Only saving grace of this climate is its perfect winter temperatures, but it still receives fuck all cold rain
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Post by Benfxmth on Dec 14, 2022 0:35:33 GMT -5
F+, due to the horribly cold crummers
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Post by Benfxmth on Feb 24, 2023 8:10:03 GMT -5
BTW, here's the climate box in the much superior non-pastel color format:
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Post by tommyFL on Feb 24, 2023 10:07:10 GMT -5
C. Summer too cool and precipitation pattern too seasonal for my tastes.
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Post by massiveshibe on Feb 24, 2023 10:32:31 GMT -5
E+ UV rays might make it feel warmer? Other than way too chilly and cloudy. UV rays donโt change the way you feel the temperature, infrared rays are what make it feel warmer. Also interesting how high the UV indexes are considering the cloudiness.
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Post by tommyFL on Feb 24, 2023 10:47:18 GMT -5
None of the UV data seen in any wikibox is real. They never take sunshine into account, they just use the latitude to find out the maximum possible UV index unde full sun and call it "average".
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Post by Benfxmth on Feb 24, 2023 11:01:08 GMT -5
None of the UV data seen in any wikibox is real. They never take sunshine into account, they just use the latitude to find out the maximum possible UV index unde full sun and call it "average". I just noticed the source for it is WeatherOnline, what do you expect from it lol
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Post by chesternz on Feb 24, 2023 11:13:13 GMT -5
E+. This climate sucks. Cold winters, very low sunshine and cool "summers" with tons of cold rain. The only things I like about it are the dry winters and, presumably, a decent amount of storms.
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Post by Speagles84 on Feb 24, 2023 11:28:54 GMT -5
None of the UV data seen in any wikibox is real. They never take sunshine into account, they just use the latitude to find out the maximum possible UV index unde full sun and call it "average". Do you have an online source providing UV index and how to calculate it for a specific location? I know you've done a lot with sun hours/percentage at home. I've been curious as to how its done. Never really looked into it before, but my wife has had melanoma in the past and curious if its an easy quick calculation given sun angle, cloud percentage, elevation etc.
The EPA gives an example of how its done on their website but can't seem to figure out where they get their "strength" and "weight" values.
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