Subj : Re: What's a storm?
To : Bj�rn Felten
From : Daryl Stout
Date : Sat Apr 01 2017 11:08 am
Bjorn,
DS> there was one brief winter
DS> storm (if you want to call it that), that brought an inch or two of snow
DS> in January.
BF@> I'm sorry to be totally off topic here, but I can't help taking the
BF@> opportunity to ask if you guys across the pond mean the same thing as
BF@> we do over here, when you say "storm".
BF@> Sometimes -- usually when watching YouTube clips :) -- I get the
BF@> feeling that it's mostly about the downfall and not about the wind
BF@> speed. Over here storm means winds averaging 10-11 on the Beaufort
BF@> scale (24.5 - 28.4 m/s).
I doubt it means the same thing, especially from a meteorological
standpoint.
Wind wise, a Lake Wind Advisory is issued for winds (sustained or gusts)
for a certain period of time, from 25 to 39 mph.
Wind Advisories are from 40 to 55 mph, and High Wind Warnings are above
that.
Storm wise, it can mean any form of inclement weather...either severe
weather (tornadoes, large hail, damaging winds, flooding rain), winter
weather (snow/blizzard, freezing rain/ice storm), or just a single
thunderstorm. To many, if it "storms", they associate it with inclement
weather.
Daryl
... X-Modem: A modem on the losing end of a lightning strike.
--- MultiMail/Win32 v0.50
--- Virtual Advanced Ver 2 for DOS
* Origin: The Thunderbolt BBS (1:19/33)