Im freezing my ass off now in Aus. But then again, i do kinda live in a cave and not do anything. But on school days everyone is wearing jumpers.
noice
for c to f you multiply the c by 1.8 and add 32 degrees,Fenris_GreyClaw wrote:
can someone link to a Celcius-Farenheit Conversion site?
isnt that a fault like the one that hit in 2004, its the same kind of fault they found, and it is just off the coast of washington or something? and when the tsunami comes it will hit some of southern canada, all of the washington coast, all of the oregan coast, and some of northern california, and it could get to about 12-13 miles inland? .i was watching a tv program on it not too long ago.Pop To Ster wrote:
Because of the damn San Andrease fault line and the tetonic plate on the west coast. I live close to Seattle, so i guess i'm screwedeagles1106 wrote:
i dont know if its because of global warming or not, but scientists are predicting that an uber tsunami will slam into the us west coast not too long for now. hey maybe its a good thing, couple thousand flamers dead.......
jk i wouldnt want anybody to die...
Oh STFU.. for Christ's sake the UK must have some pretty low engineering standards if trains are unable to run and windows break in 75 F heat lmao...elite wrote:
This summer is hotter than average with a new record set for july, in the sound of britian, the water reserves have pretty much run out, in one area 75,000 people have gone with out water because its run out totaly, and its hardly raining to next year would be even worse.
windows are breaking nder the heat, trains are delayed because the lines maybe bend and break, the roads are melting so gritters for the snow have come out for summer to stop the roads from sticking to the cars, great white sharks are found in the waters off cornwal now which is very unusual.
Global warming is really kicking in here in britian!!
is it happening anywhere else or just here??
Obviously these things were engineered differently to serve in their respective environments, these temperatures are quite unusual and thus these things are operating on the borderline of the circumstances they're supposed to be operating at. Occasionally train powerlines break here too but that is rare, haven't heard of any problems with the rail network yet so I hope it stays that way (we have a very dense railroad network).USAFDude_1988 wrote:
Oh STFU.. for Christ's sake the UK must have some pretty low engineering standards if trains are unable to run and windows break in 75 F heat lmao...elite wrote:
This summer is hotter than average with a new record set for july, in the sound of britian, the water reserves have pretty much run out, in one area 75,000 people have gone with out water because its run out totaly, and its hardly raining to next year would be even worse.
windows are breaking nder the heat, trains are delayed because the lines maybe bend and break, the roads are melting so gritters for the snow have come out for summer to stop the roads from sticking to the cars, great white sharks are found in the waters off cornwal now which is very unusual.
Global warming is really kicking in here in britian!!
is it happening anywhere else or just here??
You really have no idea what "heat" is.. please go to Texas in mid-summer... they're averaging 95F to 100F everyday... and yet they still receive water and the railroads still operate.. jeez.
Uh... if you were attempting a joke, I think you deleted your punch line?bigp66 wrote:
wow your mom seems mighty smart
Last edited by unnamednewbie13 (2006-07-25 01:58:03)
Last edited by Jammyc_53 (2006-07-25 08:37:58)
It's a dry heat here, but we hit a nice cozy 110F the other day. In fact, we have had almost two straight weeks of 100+ days.kr@cker wrote:
actual temps here have been aroun 103f/39c, but it stays so humid in georgia that the heat index (heat/humidity combined) has been +110/+44, not sure if i converted correctly, don't know if i'd call it gw though, considering we have record lows just about as often