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Post by Deleted on Dec 23, 2018 12:02:04 GMT -5
Done the climate stats for a town on the west coast of south-west North New Florida. Only 11 complete years so far, so averages are still a bit uneven.
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Post by knot on Dec 23, 2018 12:19:21 GMT -5
My most realistic, most tableland-like dream climate yet: Summary: decreased lows and highs annually (likewise annual means); decreased Winter sunshine; increased Winter precipitation; decreased Summer preciptiation; added snowy days. Looks more like it belongs at 867 m AMSL now, aye
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Post by Steelernation on Dec 23, 2018 15:19:40 GMT -5
Here’s an end of the year update. Pretty minor changes—colder December, wetter May, more clouds.
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Post by jgtheone on Dec 23, 2018 21:13:00 GMT -5
My most realistic, most tableland-like dream climate yet: Summary: decreased lows and highs annually (likewise annual means); decreased Winter sunshine; increased Winter precipitation; decreased Summer preciptiation; added snowy days. Looks more like it belongs at 867 m AMSL now, aye Would be awesome if something like this actually existed here, save the possibility of snow in summer
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Post by ral31 on Dec 23, 2018 22:38:51 GMT -5
Here's my latest version.
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Post by Deleted on Dec 26, 2018 9:51:52 GMT -5
So I'm working on Florida City and Florida City Airport now, whose averages I will table up after doing 10 years each (though eventually it will be 30 years). It will take until December 2019 to complete all 673 years of data for all the cities in New Florida, which is a pretty big place. That is, if I do two years' data per day. It takes a while because I do each day at a time, with data like sunshine hours, precipitation, whether thunder, fog, hail, snow etc happened or not as well.
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Post by Giorbanguly on Dec 26, 2018 12:37:30 GMT -5
Here's my latest version. Excellent climate, one of the best dream climates I've seen
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Post by Lommaren on Feb 2, 2019 19:31:51 GMT -5
This has changed a fraction since, would prefer a bit higher diurnals and 350 more sunshine hours, 60 for each month between May and September and 25 extra for April and October now.
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Post by knot on Mar 8, 2019 20:28:58 GMT -5
Some notable improvements have been made, I must say.
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Post by srfoskey on Mar 12, 2019 11:01:11 GMT -5
Here's mine. It hasn't changed much in the past three years, but I recently made it slightly colder and more variable, with 100°F of annual variation on average. Snow cover days by month: Nov: 0.5 Dec: 6 Jan: 12 Feb: 11 Mar: 2.5 Record low max/high min (°F) Jan: 5/54 Feb: 2/57 Mar: 12/63 Apr: 27/69 May: 43/74 June: 55/79 July: 61/81 Aug: 57/80 Sept: 46/76 Oct: 34/71 Nov: 21/64 Dec: 6/59 Some notable improvements have been made, I must say. Gaak! I don't think I could take those summer record lows.
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Post by Lommaren on Mar 21, 2019 9:44:06 GMT -5
Speagles84 do you have any specific dream climate either on hand or that you could construct a weatherbox for? It would be interesting.
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Post by Speagles84 on Mar 21, 2019 9:48:07 GMT -5
Speagles84 do you have any specific dream climate either on hand or that you could construct a weatherbox for? It would be interesting. I was working on one, have been so busy with work, PE exam, and life it hasn't been finished Definetly either a cold Dfb, Dsb, or moderate Dfc/Dsc
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Post by Ariete on Mar 23, 2019 5:20:21 GMT -5
Inspired by Minneapolis hitting 100F in May in 2018, I had to improve Arietenvaara's May record. If polar arctic Minneapolis can hit 100F in May, so can A'vaara, fucken! The September record remained the same. I didn't remember that 37.7C is 99.9F when I determined the record, and 99.9F just looks cool.
November's mean is now 0.6C cooler. An 9C high in November translates to 4.5C on the 30th, so it's more in line with December's avg high (was 5.1C).
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Post by Babu on Mar 23, 2019 5:37:48 GMT -5
Inspired by Minneapolis hitting 100F in May in 2018, I had to improve Arietenvaara's May record. If polar arctic Minneapolis can hit 100F in May, so can A'vaara, fucken! The September record remained the same. I didn't remember that 37.7C is 99.9F when I determined the record, and 99.9F just looks cool.
November's mean is now 0.6C cooler. An 9C high in November translates to 4.5C on the 30th, so it's more in line with December's avg high (was 5.1C).
Why do you want cloudy winters?
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Post by Ariete on Mar 23, 2019 5:45:38 GMT -5
Why do you want cloudy winters?
Several reasons, really. One is that due to the temperatures a lot of sunshine would be dangerous for the snowpack, which isn't permanent to begin with. Another reason is the coastal location with heavy maritime influences. And cloud is what I associate winter with. Finally, after a cloudy winter the spring sunshine feels blissful.
edit: I would like to add February's sunshine above 40% but cannot be bothered to calculate what it would mean in sunshine hours. Or maybe I'll do it later.
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Post by Cadeau on Mar 23, 2019 12:56:28 GMT -5
Why do you want cloudy winters? Several reasons, really. One is that due to the temperatures a lot of sunshine would be dangerous for the snowpack, which isn't permanent to begin with. Another reason is the coastal location with heavy maritime influences. And cloud is what I associate winter with. Finally, after a cloudy winter the spring sunshine feels blissful.
edit: I would like to add February's sunshine above 40% but cannot be bothered to calculate what it would mean in sunshine hours. Or maybe I'll do it later.
What's the latitude of your dream climate? Latitude = 40% Possible Sunshine 42°N: ≈ 120 hours 45°N: ≈ 118 hours 48°N: ≈ 116 hours 60°N: ≈ 104 hours
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Post by Ariete on Mar 23, 2019 13:11:19 GMT -5
What's the latitude of your dream climate? Latitude = 40% Possible Sunshine 42°N: ≈ 120 hours 45°N: ≈ 118 hours 48°N: ≈ 116 hours 60°N: ≈ 104 hours
It's 47.5N, but I think when I did that sunshine percentage thing I went with 47N. Not a big difference anyway.
Thanks, 116 sounds reasonable.
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Post by tij on Apr 11, 2019 13:00:31 GMT -5
An update! Thoughts Lommaren Cadeau Babu ? Inspired by Rodez, St-Girons, Embrun, and Olympia, I made significant edits... May need to fix precip days though-- trying to create an "art" climate here so require additional critique and commentary... I might incorporate insights from the 40S average in the future <iframe width="23.279999999999973" height="11.940000000000055" style="position: absolute; width: 23.28px; height: 11.94px; z-index: -9999; border-style: none; left: 4px; top: 98px;" id="MoatPxIOPT0_55664846" scrolling="no"></iframe> <iframe width="23.279999999999973" height="11.940000000000055" style="position: absolute; width: 23.28px; height: 11.94px; z-index: -9999; border-style: none; left: 1095px; top: 98px;" id="MoatPxIOPT0_35708624" scrolling="no"></iframe> <iframe width="23.279999999999973" height="11.940000000000055" style="position: absolute; width: 23.28px; height: 11.94px; z-index: -9999; border-style: none; left: 4px; top: 633px;" id="MoatPxIOPT0_6435188" scrolling="no"></iframe> <iframe width="23.279999999999973" height="11.940000000000055" style="position: absolute; width: 23.28px; height: 11.94px; z-index: -9999; border-style: none; left: 1095px; top: 633px;" id="MoatPxIOPT0_95714601" scrolling="no"></iframe>
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Post by Cadeau on Apr 12, 2019 3:51:24 GMT -5
An update! Thoughts Lommaren Cadeau Babu ? Inspired by Rodez, St-Girons, Embrun, and Olympia, I made significant edits... May need to fix precip days though-- trying to create an "art" climate here so require additional critique and commentary... I might incorporate insights from the 40S average in the future <iframe width="23.279999999999973" height="11.940000000000055" style="position: absolute; width: 23.28px; height: 11.94px; z-index: -9999; border-style: none; left: 4px; top: 98px;" id="MoatPxIOPT0_55664846" scrolling="no"></iframe> <iframe width="23.279999999999973" height="11.940000000000055" style="position: absolute; width: 23.28px; height: 11.94px; z-index: -9999; border-style: none; left: 1095px; top: 98px;" id="MoatPxIOPT0_35708624" scrolling="no"></iframe> <iframe width="23.279999999999973" height="11.940000000000055" style="position: absolute; width: 23.28px; height: 11.94px; z-index: -9999; border-style: none; left: 4px; top: 633px;" id="MoatPxIOPT0_6435188" scrolling="no"></iframe> <iframe width="23.279999999999973" height="11.940000000000055" style="position: absolute; width: 23.28px; height: 11.94px; z-index: -9999; border-style: none; left: 1095px; top: 633px;" id="MoatPxIOPT0_95714601" scrolling="no"></iframe> Those summer record lows remind of Canadian climates outside of the Pacific region than a prototype of Oceanic ones.
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Post by Cadeau on Apr 23, 2019 22:03:05 GMT -5
Located 15km northwest of the city hall. The downtown weather station is only a few one-tenth of a degree warmer and slightly smaller diurnal range due to the UHI. Modified the average highs/means/lows and precipitations for a downtown station, more significant seasonal lag to make a realistic pattern over a year.
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