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In rec.aviation.student Mxsmanic wrote:
writes: So you haven't been here on the Canadian Prairies in winter, either. Every winter someone will get a vehicle stuck on a country road and try to walk a mile or two for help, in a 20-knot wind at -20C. They don't make it. The hot weather equivalent of -20? C is 60? C, and nobody makes it in that, either. You can dress to protect yourself against -20? C, but nothing you might wear can protect you against 60? C. This is completely ridiculous. I assume you just took 20C as an average, then added and subtracted. You can't do that! 60C is higher than the hottest recorded temperature on the planet. -20C is routine and common in a great many inhabited locations. They're absolutely not equivalent. In very cold water, near freezing, an unprotected human is unconscious in under 20 minutes and dead shortly after that, if he doesn't drown first. But that's just it: You can protect yourself in cold weather. In hot weather, you can't. Of course you can. You can wear light clothes, carry shade, and drink lots of water. It never ceases to amuse me just how far you will sink for the sake of argument. You're a smart guy, I know you are from your posting history. Yet the things you say are completely ridiculous and nonsensical so much of the time. There has to be some little voice inside you saying "This makes no sense! You can't say that -20C is equivalent to 60C!" Such a position does not survive a moment's critical thinking. And yet you will apparently make a thousand such assertions before you will ever once say, "You're right, I made a mistake." Well, if you can't be reasonable or wise, at least you can be hilarious. -- Mike Ash Radio Free Earth Broadcasting from our climate-controlled studios deep inside the Moon |
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On Jul 2, 2:22*pm, Mxsmanic wrote:
writes: So you haven't been here on the Canadian Prairies in winter, either. Every winter someone will get a vehicle stuck on a country road and try to walk a mile or two for help, in a 20-knot wind at -20C. They don't make it. The hot weather equivalent of -20° C is 60° C, and nobody makes it in that, either. *You can dress to protect yourself against -20° C, but nothing you might wear can protect you against 60° C. Never been in a sauna? Cheers |
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Mxsmanic wrote:
What are the main things I have to give special consideration to when preparing to fly in very hot weather (43° C)? Irrelevant. You don't fly. You aren't preparing to fly. It isn't 43 deg C where you are right now. |
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