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Post by Ethereal on Jun 10, 2024 3:09:31 GMT -5
Both are on the same latitude and are relatively mild climates. I personally might go with Port Elizabeth for its somewhat "eternal spring" feel and for being a drier climate overall (I doubt they get frequent floods like we do).
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Post by Benfxmth on Jun 10, 2024 6:24:46 GMT -5
Sydney Olympic Park
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Post by AJ1013 on Jun 10, 2024 6:27:35 GMT -5
Port Elizabeth. More pleasant
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Post by ๐๐ฟMรถrรถn๐๐ฟ on Jun 10, 2024 7:22:19 GMT -5
Sydney is better
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Post by tompas on Jun 10, 2024 7:26:02 GMT -5
Sydney for warmer summers and somewhat cooler winters.
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Post by tommyFL on Jun 10, 2024 8:27:02 GMT -5
Sydney is way better
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Post by fairweatherfan on Jun 10, 2024 8:43:01 GMT -5
Port Elizabeth
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Post by desiccatedi85 on Jun 10, 2024 9:03:22 GMT -5
Sydney has marginally better temps. Port Elizabeth wins it though for the much drier and sunnier summers.
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Post by Steelernation on Jun 10, 2024 12:57:09 GMT -5
Whichever gets more storms
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Post by greysrigging on Jun 10, 2024 15:55:30 GMT -5
The Sydney Olympic Park site although neither are bad....
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Post by Kaleetan on Jun 10, 2024 16:17:03 GMT -5
Sydney Olympic Park. Warmer summers, more rain, and no recorded frosts.
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Post by Ethereal on Jun 10, 2024 22:18:28 GMT -5
Whichever gets more storms Pretty sure it's Sydney.
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Post by Ethereal on Jun 10, 2024 22:21:47 GMT -5
Sydney Olympic Park. Warmer summers, more rain, and no recorded frosts.The Olympic Park station was constructed in 1996 and it closed down in 2011. I'm certain that frosts have been recorded in that part of Sydney before 1996 and (I would bet) after 2011. But they're still rare there. What I find astonishing is that Port Elizabeth has warmer winter highs than us, and yet it's more prone to colder record lows throughout the cool months -- Guessing PE has unstable LA-esque winters where it's 25C today and 13C tomorrow... ๐ค
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Post by fairweatherfan on Jun 10, 2024 22:50:32 GMT -5
Sydney Olympic Park. Warmer summers, more rain, and no recorded frosts.The Olympic Park station was constructed in 1996 and it closed down in 2011. I'm certain that frosts have been recorded in that part of Sydney before 1996 and (I would bet) after 2011. But they're still rare there. What I find astonishing is that Port Elizabeth has warmer winter highs than us, and yet it's more prone to colder record lows throughout the cool months -- Guessing PE has unstable LA-esque winters where it's 25C today and 13C tomorrow... ๐ค Los Angeles winters aren't that unstable imo, maybe you meant Louisiana?
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Post by cawfeefan on Jun 11, 2024 1:23:37 GMT -5
Sydney Olympic Park for more seasonality
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Post by cawfeefan on Jun 11, 2024 1:28:24 GMT -5
The Olympic Park station was constructed in 1996 and it closed down in 2011. I'm certain that frosts have been recorded in that part of Sydney before 1996 and (I would bet) after 2011. But they're still rare there. What I find astonishing is that Port Elizabeth has warmer winter highs than us, and yet it's more prone to colder record lows throughout the cool months -- Guessing PE has unstable LA-esque winters where it's 25C today and 13C tomorrow... ๐ค Los Angeles winters aren't that unstable imo, maybe you meant Louisiana? Maybe Los Angeles is stable for North American standards, but itโs more unstable than coastal Australia.
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Post by CRISPR on Jun 11, 2024 2:24:13 GMT -5
Sydney Olympic Park for greater rainfall
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Post by Ethereal on Jun 11, 2024 3:03:48 GMT -5
The Olympic Park station was constructed in 1996 and it closed down in 2011. I'm certain that frosts have been recorded in that part of Sydney before 1996 and (I would bet) after 2011. But they're still rare there. What I find astonishing is that Port Elizabeth has warmer winter highs than us, and yet it's more prone to colder record lows throughout the cool months -- Guessing PE has unstable LA-esque winters where it's 25C today and 13C tomorrow... ๐ค Los Angeles winters aren't that unstable imo, maybe you meant Louisiana? Yeah true, Louisiana is more inconsistent in winter - I've seen 7C highs followed by 22C in the next day. I brought up Los Angeles because it is a mild snowless city like Sydney and Port Elizabeth (so they seem comparable). And I've noticed that LA in winters has chilly days where temps are 13C and then a 28C day in the same week (caused by Santa Ana winds). So I assumed that PE also has such zigzag-y temperature ranges in winter, hence it's 20C average high.
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Post by Steelernation on Jun 11, 2024 6:27:04 GMT -5
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Post by Cadeau on Jun 12, 2024 11:03:56 GMT -5
Port Elizabeth for slightly cooler summers.
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