Eric Salop
Elite Member
Good morning, hard to imagine many of you sweltering in the heat when here rain is lashing against the windows and is set to keep on coming all day long. On the positive side, this is just the motivation I needed to stay inside and attempt to repair some electric fence energises, one is mine and the other two belong to a friend. Looked at one already and found high voltage capacitor had failed, but broke a transformer pin while getting it out. Never that keen working on things that like to bite back.
"Stay in the shade and drink plenty today folks, by this afternoon we are anticipating a high of 290 Mega SWELTS !" :laughing:
Don, Kyle makes a good point, the WBGT sounds a great idea, taking into account many different weather parameters that contribute to heat exhaustion, but do you think they missed a trick when arbitrarily choosing the numbers to go with it that seemingly takes no account of human nature ? Most of us and particularly the media expect bigger numbers for something that is "hotter" and more life threatening, instead of a pretend Celsius or Fahrenheit "temperature" that is always smaller than the number you would see on ordinary thermometer. Scientifically it works fine, but they really needed a marketing guy on the committee to come up with different units that sound more sensationalist when read out by a weather forecaster.You have to have the chart on the Wet Bulb Globe Temp. There are 5 categories each just a few degrees different and each depending on the level of activity - low, medium, high and has the amount of water you should be drinking and how many minutes of rest each hour. It's like a care plan for 15 different scenarios in the heat, in the sun
"Stay in the shade and drink plenty today folks, by this afternoon we are anticipating a high of 290 Mega SWELTS !" :laughing: