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#11
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Latent heat. That is why they spray water on the oranges to
reduce frost damage. After a day or two at below freezing, but near freezing temperatures in stable air, there will be little airframe ice because the water has finally frozen. But with unstable air, more fresh and liquid water is being cooled into the supercooled range and that makes structural ice. wrote in message ups.com... | | Bill wrote: | | In fact I've noticed when there is ice about and the temp is near | freezing that | it tends to stay that way -- no rate at all!! | | I've noticed that too, and always assumed its because of the ice | buildup on the thermometer. | |
#12
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Why dies everyone think that the standard lapse rate is a
meteorological term? It's not. On Fri, 26 Oct 2007 17:59:15 +0100, "S Green" wrote: "Peter" wrote in message .. . (Dane Spearing) wrote Now, our Cherokee 6 can't climb up to FL 350, so I have no personal experience with how high the standard lapse rate holds. However, my son will tell you that for a clear day, above 2000' AGL, it seems to hold very very well. He got lucky. I can't remember a flight here (UK) where the lapse rate was anything like 2C/1000ft. Yesterday, +10C on the ground, +8C at 5000ft. That might have been because there was an inversion from the ground up to say 2000 ft, a higher temperature that ground level. |
#13
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![]() wrote in message ... Why dies everyone think that the standard lapse rate is a meteorological term? It's not. You think it is a cooking term? Maybe medical, as in "I let my medical lapse". Al G |
#14
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It is used to model the standard atmosphere, certainly is a
scientific term used in physics, which applies to meteorological study. It has an application to actual flight by using terms such as ISA+20 "Al G" wrote in message ... | | wrote in message | ... | Why dies everyone think that the standard lapse rate is a | meteorological term? | | It's not. | | | You think it is a cooking term? | Maybe medical, as in "I let my medical lapse". | | Al G | | |
#15
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Environmental lapse rate is a meteorological term.
Adiabatic lapse rates are meteorologocal terms. Standard lapse rates are an invention of engineers to enable them to compare aircraft performance. On Mon, 29 Oct 2007 08:40:05 -0700, "Al G" wrote: wrote in message .. . Why dies everyone think that the standard lapse rate is a meteorological term? It's not. You think it is a cooking term? Maybe medical, as in "I let my medical lapse". Al G |
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