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Stanley
Local Historian & Old Fart


36804 Posts
Posted -  28/12/2010  :  04:59
LINK HERE  FOR THE OLD TOPIC.

New start just to stop Sue getting annoyed by emails!

 

 


Stanley Challenger Graham




Barlick View
stanley at barnoldswick.freeserve.co.uk
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frankwilk
Senior Member


3975 Posts
Posted - 26/01/2011 : 09:52
Cathy  I believe that the Floods in Queensland will make a huge difference to the World not only Oz. The effects haven't started to bite yet but they will.Please keep posting.

" were you multi-tasking again?...wine in one hand and fag in the other and trying to type at the same time as watching TV?)"
Vision of Andy Capp, or Nora Battylolol



Frank Wilkinson       Once Navy Always Navy Go to Top of Page
moh
Silver Surfer


6860 Posts
Posted - 26/01/2011 : 11:40
Not sure what it is, I will look when I go down.


Say only a little but say it well Go to Top of Page
belle
VIP Member


6502 Posts
Posted - 26/01/2011 : 11:48
I am interested re what is happening in Australia (could'nt care a less about somerset!) and have even looked it all up on a map...don't even know where Somerset is on a map!


Life is what you make itGo to Top of Page
moh
Silver Surfer


6860 Posts
Posted - 26/01/2011 : 13:27
Should have put 29 yesterday - it is 29.5 today. I don't know what it is, it has a finger on like a clock. It is a small wall mounted one I got when I retired.


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Stanley
Local Historian & Old Fart


36804 Posts
Posted - 27/01/2011 : 06:45
That makes sense Moh. Mines on 29.5" as well. The figure refers to the length of a column of mercury atmospheric pressure will support if the top of the column is in a vacuum. Goes back to the days when all barmeters were mercury coumns. The modern ones (aneroid barometers) hafe a different machanism that doesn't use mercury but a small enclosed metal bellows that alters shape as pressure varies. The impoirtant thing isn't the actual reading but how it changes day to day so it doesn't matter if it's not excatly accurate.

Dry frost again this morning. We'll be walking before 08:00. The days are lengthening!


Stanley Challenger Graham




Barlick View
stanley at barnoldswick.freeserve.co.uk Go to Top of Page
Stanley
Local Historian & Old Fart


36804 Posts
Posted - 27/01/2011 : 08:58
A few flakes of snow falling in Barick at the moment.....


Stanley Challenger Graham




Barlick View
stanley at barnoldswick.freeserve.co.uk Go to Top of Page
panbiker
Senior Member


2300 Posts
Posted - 27/01/2011 : 11:23
I have two aneroid barometers that both display within 0.2" of each other. One is a small plinth mounted table version made in the 1940's which I used for tropospheric predictions for my Amateur Radio station. The other is a more modern wall mounted job but more or less the same size. For best accuracy, aneroid barometers should be calibrated to known atmospheric pressure at sea level. Maybe we should send all ours off to Gloria (nearer the sea than Barlick) for tweaking!


Ian Go to Top of Page
belle
VIP Member


6502 Posts
Posted - 27/01/2011 : 11:57
I have a barometer can i join the "my barometer's better than yours" club...never look at mine, don't fiddle with it or tap it, I go online and read what the met office says, it's easier.


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panbiker
Senior Member


2300 Posts
Posted - 27/01/2011 : 12:30
of course you can Belle. Does the met office have a station in your garden or are you relying on measurements from afar? It can make a vast difference. I know that Skipton weather is measured at Bingley which is miles away up th'aire valley. I look at my two barometers on a daily basis (I only ever tap one on a regular basis though), make my prediction in my head, it makes no difference anyway the weather always pleases itself  and always will. I find looking out of the window one of the most reliable methods for local predictionWink


Ian Go to Top of Page
moh
Silver Surfer


6860 Posts
Posted - 27/01/2011 : 13:46
Mine has gone up slightly to nearer 30.  It is blooming cold today but at least it is fine.


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frankwilk
Senior Member


3975 Posts
Posted - 27/01/2011 : 18:46
Ian
I think Belle can get by without a weather station in her garden, if she looks out of the Window she can see if it Wind, Rain, or Shine !!!



Frank Wilkinson       Once Navy Always Navy Go to Top of Page
belle
VIP Member


6502 Posts
Posted - 27/01/2011 : 18:57
I used to have a magnificent peice of seaweed that forecasted the weathe rfor me, but it made the bedroom smell so my mum threw it out!


Life is what you make itGo to Top of Page
panbiker
Senior Member


2300 Posts
Posted - 27/01/2011 : 19:02


quote:
frankwilk wrote:
Ian
I think Belle can get by without a weather station in her garden, if she looks out of the Window she can see if it Wind, Rain, or Shine !!!


I thought that was what I said!



Ian Go to Top of Page
frankwilk
Senior Member


3975 Posts
Posted - 27/01/2011 : 20:29
Is it ??

I didn't realise that when she said she goes on line it was the washing line she was referring to Wink



Frank Wilkinson       Once Navy Always Navy Go to Top of Page
Stanley
Local Historian & Old Fart


36804 Posts
Posted - 28/01/2011 : 07:51
We all have our own ways of forecasting weather and having worked outside all my life I have developed a pretty good instinct for it. Ian is right, look at the weather and try to see the pattern. No such thing as my barometer is better thgan yours. All are slightly inaccurate and only tell local atmospheric pressure. It's the movement in readings on the same instrument that gives the clues. Mine's reading 29.6 this morning and that means high pressure is holding so prospect is clear sky, frost and another good walking day. Taking the mickey out of Belle is neither hepful or polite.


Stanley Challenger Graham




Barlick View
stanley at barnoldswick.freeserve.co.uk Go to Top of Page
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