October 27, 20205 yr https://on.windy.com/49tk0 Never seen such cold in October when I lived out in New Mexico. Take a look at Texas and Arizona. Wow. Dave Edited October 27, 20205 yr by dave2013 Simulator: P3Dv6.1 System Specs: Intel i7 13700K CPU, MSI Mag Z790 Tomahawk Motherboard, 32GB DDR5 6000MHz RAM, Nvidia GeForce RTX 4070 Video Card, 3x 1TB Samsung 980 Pro M.2 2280 SSDs, Windows 11 Home OS My website for P3D stuff: https://sites.google.com/view/thep3dfiles/home
October 27, 20205 yr @hjsmuc Yes, somewhere else on the planet is being warmed at the expense of Texas and Arizona. I suppose the irony is: if globe is warming, why so cold in certain places? Mark Robinson Part-time Ferroequinologist Author of FLIGHT: A near-future short story (ebook available on amazon) I made the baby cry - A2A Simulations L-049 Constellation Sky Simulations MD-11 V2.2 Pilot. The best "lite" MD-11 money can buy (well, it's not freeware!)
October 27, 20205 yr 54 minutes ago, hjsmuc said: That's an effect of global warming. It's a shift in annual weather patterns, that is why some call it climate change. I don't debate it the costs of natural disasters speak for itself, also the quantity of diesel used by a Canadian Coast Guard Ship today compared to in the 1970s is another indicator, less ice means they use less diesel, they can tell you they are using much less diesel now compared to 40 years ago Matthew Kane I'm Dyslexic, what's an error to you is not to me
October 27, 20205 yr 1 hour ago, dave2013 said: https://on.windy.com/49tk0 Never seen such cold in October when I lived out in New Mexico. Take a look at Texas and Arizona. Wow. Dave Yes! I flew from Natchez, MS, to Ft Worth Alliance this morning and Windy.com warned me. It was depicting a pretty good sized area in pink even at the surface. Ice storms (surface) were forecast very near there. IFR on top at 10,000 for the flight, with some excursions through clouds, but no icing. Was right at 0°C OAT. NASCAR race at Texas Motor Speedway postponed until noon EDT today has still not been restarted at now 6 PM EDT. At noon it was 39°F at the track. Dang! The Windy.com screen I snipped got replaced by a later snip. Here was the view on top. Edited October 27, 20205 yr by fppilot Frank Patton Corsair 5000D Airflow Case; MSI B650 Tomahawk MOB; Ryzen 7 7800 X3D CPU; ASUS RTX 4080 Super; NZXT 360mm liquid cooler; Corsair Vengeance 64GB DDR5 4800 MHz RAM; RMX850X Gold PSU;; ASUS VG289 4K 27" Display; Honeycomb Alpha & Bravo, Crosswind 3's w/dampener. Former USAF meteorologist & ground weather school instructor. AOPA Member #07379126 "I will never put my name on a product that does not have in it the best that is in me." - John Deere
October 27, 20205 yr Well it's the end of October. Cold happens. Like the ol T-shirt said. @birdguy you're at 30 degrees!! I remember being a kid 40 years ago, and sweating in my halloween costume, but I also remember freezing in my costume. It's that time year. Rhett 7800X3D ♣ 96 GB G.Skill Flare ♣ Gigabyte 4090 ♣ Crucial P5 Plus 2TB
October 27, 20205 yr 2 hours ago, dave2013 said: https://on.windy.com/49tk0 You know what is really neat about Windy -- if you look at the Black Hills area -- just west of Rapid City -- you can see the winds at the lower levels from the southwest pushing around the Black Hills. You can also see this effect around islands like Hawaii or Madeira sometimes. Rhett 7800X3D ♣ 96 GB G.Skill Flare ♣ Gigabyte 4090 ♣ Crucial P5 Plus 2TB
October 27, 20205 yr 1 hour ago, HighBypass said: I suppose the irony is: if globe is warming, why so cold in certain places? I suspect you're making a funny here. But since that is an actual argument raised by some climate change deniers it deserves an answer here, just to prevent others from using it: Weather is not climate. By putting more heat into the atmosphere we aren't just making it *warmer*, we're adding more *energy*, which leads to all sorts of climatic chaos -- including some places seeing unusual cold. Anyone who's lived in the upper midwest for the past few years now knows the "polar vortex" well. This is one effect of global climate change: warmer polar regions mean a less strong jet stream, which leads to that cold polar air wandering around in all sorts of places it doesn't usually. Edited October 27, 20205 yr by kaosfere
October 27, 20205 yr Author 1 hour ago, HighBypass said: @hjsmuc Yes, somewhere else on the planet is being warmed at the expense of Texas and Arizona. I suppose the irony is: if globe is warming, why so cold in certain places? 27 minutes ago, kaosfere said: I suspect you're making a funny here. But since that is an actual argument raised by some climate change deniers it deserves an answer here, just to prevent others from using it: Weather is not climate. By putting more heat into the atmosphere we aren't just making it *warmer*, we're adding more *energy*, which leads to all sorts of climatic chaos -- including some places seeing unusual cold. Anyone who's lived in the upper midwest for the past few years now knows the "polar vortex" well. This is one effect of global climate change: warmer polar regions mean a less strong jet stream, which leads to that cold polar air wandering around in all sorts of places it doesn't usually. Oh yes! Of course! You see, if it's too *cold*, then it's because of climate change, which itself is caused by global warming, so if A=B and B=C, then it follows that it is too *cold* because it is too *warm*. Now, stay with me here, if it's too hot, then *that* is *also* because of climate change, and since climate change is caused by global warming then it is too hot because, well, it is too warm. Just remember that no matter what happens with the climate, even if we have record cold in early Autumn, or a really hot Summer anywhere in the world(unusual I know), it is always and obviously because the climate is "shifting" or "changing" because of global warming. See how that works? Dave Simulator: P3Dv6.1 System Specs: Intel i7 13700K CPU, MSI Mag Z790 Tomahawk Motherboard, 32GB DDR5 6000MHz RAM, Nvidia GeForce RTX 4070 Video Card, 3x 1TB Samsung 980 Pro M.2 2280 SSDs, Windows 11 Home OS My website for P3D stuff: https://sites.google.com/view/thep3dfiles/home
October 28, 20205 yr Remember, kids, you have choices in life. You can choose to engage with denialists whose posting history makes it clear that they make a hobby out of taking contrarian positions and with whom you're never going to agree. Or you can accept the nearly universal scientific consensus that is no longer controversial outside of folks who are politically motivated to make it so. You'll probably be branded a "sheep" or something for chosing the latter, but at least you'll demonstrate sound judgement and not waste your time screaming at a wall.
October 28, 20205 yr Moderator 3 hours ago, dave2013 said: Take a look at Texas and Arizona. Wow. I live in Dallas and it’s been really cold Monday and today with lows in the 30’s and wind chills and/or indexes in the low 30’s. It’s definitely the coldest few days that I remember in the 20 years I’ve lived here. Btw, I was surprised when I was watching football on Sunday and the Denver game came on and it was 16 degrees and snowing. Avsim Board of Directors | Avsim Forums Moderator
October 28, 20205 yr Ice storm here. Pretty miserable. This after 8 weeks of not even a cloud in the sky and above normal temperatures. Perfectly normal. Richard Chafey i7-8700K @4.8GHz - 32Gb @3200 - ASUS ROG Maximus X Hero - EVGA RTX3090 - 3840x2160 Res - KBSim Gunfighter - Thrustmaster Warthog dual throttles - Crosswind V3 pedals MSFS 2020, DCS
October 28, 20205 yr 12 hours ago, dave2013 said: https://on.windy.com/49tk0 Never seen such cold in October when I lived out in New Mexico. Take a look at Texas and Arizona. Wow. Dave Hear we go again. Cold in New Mexico is local short term weather. Not long term average global tempreture. However... as others have told you, a good way to consider global warming is in terms of global energy increase. That global energy increase doesn't just vanish, it has an impact and that impact can be in terms of atmospheric disruption, sometimes referred to as global weirding. Its also possible that your chilly short term local weather is a natural random fluctuation. Natural, local, short term cold snaps don't stop because the average tempreture of the entire globe, long term, is increasing. Edited October 28, 20205 yr by martin-w
October 28, 20205 yr 13 hours ago, Matthew Kane said: they can tell you they are using much less diesel now compared to 40 years ago Could that be down to 40 years advancement of ship powerplant technology? EDIT and yes I was making funny earlier.. Edited October 28, 20205 yr by HighBypass Mark Robinson Part-time Ferroequinologist Author of FLIGHT: A near-future short story (ebook available on amazon) I made the baby cry - A2A Simulations L-049 Constellation Sky Simulations MD-11 V2.2 Pilot. The best "lite" MD-11 money can buy (well, it's not freeware!)
October 28, 20205 yr 13 hours ago, kaosfere said: Remember, kids, you have choices in life. You can choose to engage with denialists whose posting history makes it clear that they make a hobby out of taking contrarian positions In the last debate, the bit where he told me I didnt mind paying extra taxes for climate change because I live in a notorious tax haven, made me chuckle. 😆
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