You schlongs don't forget to hose down your ac units. Rain usually washes them for us.
Milwaukees Best Light said:
You schlongs don't forget to hose down your ac units. Rain usually washes them for us.
maroon barchetta said:Milwaukees Best Light said:
You schlongs don't forget to hose down your ac units. Rain usually washes them for us.
How much bleach should I use?
Cromagnum said:maroon barchetta said:Milwaukees Best Light said:
You schlongs don't forget to hose down your ac units. Rain usually washes them for us.
How much bleach should I use?
The more the better. You want the biggest hole in the aluminum you can make so you can pull in more fresh air.
Milwaukees Best Light said:
You schlongs don't forget to hose down your ac units. Rain usually washes them for us.
Rustys-Beef-o-Reeno said:
Check again this morning
Quote:
Alicia was the first hurricane to make landfall on the United States since Hurricane Allen struck South Texas in August 1980 over three years prior, ending the longest period of the twentieth century without a landfalling hurricane on the U.S. coast.
I slept through that bish when I was little and that's when my momma realized she had a stone cold baby gangster on her hands.tk for tu juan said:
40 years ago today, Hurricane Alicia
Well, the August heat started in early June this year, but fair point, I never said I was still a gangster.Ag_07 said:
Yeah...Who apparently can't handle a little Houston August heat.
tk for tu juan said:
40 years ago today, Hurricane AliciaQuote:
Alicia was the first hurricane to make landfall on the United States since Hurricane Allen struck South Texas in August 1980 over three years prior, ending the longest period of the twentieth century without a landfalling hurricane on the U.S. coast.
It was the dew point.Sea Speed said:
Maybe it is the breeze and the shade, but at my house it is freaking awesome out. I was floored when I walked out this morning
Bogey1996 said:
The thing I remember about Alicia was going outside when the eye was overhead. So calm, right in the middle of the storm.
I agree with you on that last point but aren't we both simply saying that we prefer a dew point of 76 over a dew point of 88?P.H. Dexippus said:
I think % of relative humidity is more relevant number. The dew point is the temperature at which the temperature needs to be to reach 100% humidity (often meaning rain). Like the cold glass of water sweating, if you cool hot air, it causes the water to the air to condense. Hot air can hold more moisture than cold air, so all else equal, the relative humidity of hot air is less than cold air (for all of those with oversized HVACs, this is why your house feels humid when it cools down too fast without sucking the water out through the coil).
All that to say, a 50 degree dew point isn't going to feel dry and chapstick-y when it's 50 degrees ambient outside. I'd take 76 dew point and 104 degrees ambient over 95% humidity and 90 degree ambient any day.
If the dew point is 58 and it is 58 degrees outside, its going to feel like a foggy/rainy/cold day in Seattle (miserable). But I agree, dew point can be a good indicator..Quote:
Relative humidity can be 70% and it can feel great outside or it can feel miserable. With a dew point of 58 it's always going to feel great.
I remember one of my colleagues here in Houston spent the entire night and early morning in his closet in his apartment complex. He was from somewhere in the northeast.tk for tu juan said:
40 years ago today, Hurricane AliciaQuote:
Alicia was the first hurricane to make landfall on the United States since Hurricane Allen struck South Texas in August 1980 over three years prior, ending the longest period of the twentieth century without a landfalling hurricane on the U.S. coast.
Relativity humidity will change with the temperature. The absolute moisture content of the air will change (more moisture in the air) as the air heats up.P.H. Dexippus said:
I think % of relative humidity is more relevant number. The dew point is the temperature at which the temperature needs to be to reach 100% humidity (often meaning rain). Like the cold glass of water sweating, if you cool hot air, it causes the water to the air to condense. Hot air can hold more moisture than cold air, so all else equal, the relative humidity of hot air is less than cold air (for all of those with oversized HVACs, this is why your house feels humid when it cools down too fast without sucking the water out through the coil).
All that to say, a 50 degree dew point isn't going to feel dry and chapstick-y when it's 50 degrees ambient outside. I'd take 76 dew point and 104 degrees ambient over 95% humidity and 90 degree ambient any day.
Show some respect sonny!evestor1 said:
Your not an OG until you start talking about Storms. Yall are old!
Serotonin said:It was the dew point.Sea Speed said:
Maybe it is the breeze and the shade, but at my house it is freaking awesome out. I was floored when I walked out this morning
That's the one practical takeaway I've gotten from SCW. Dew point dictates how it feels outside.
90 degree day will feel crisp and amazing if there's a 55 degree dew point
76 degree day will feel oppressive and uncomfortable with a 70 degree dew point
Yeah, today dewpoint is 71, definitely in uncomfortable zone.Cromagnum said:Serotonin said:It was the dew point.Sea Speed said:
Maybe it is the breeze and the shade, but at my house it is freaking awesome out. I was floored when I walked out this morning
That's the one practical takeaway I've gotten from SCW. Dew point dictates how it feels outside.
90 degree day will feel crisp and amazing if there's a 55 degree dew point
76 degree day will feel oppressive and uncomfortable with a 70 degree dew point
It's 102 with 40% humidity outside. The only thing crisp is my yard. It feels amazingly ****ing hot. (Yea I realize humidity and dew point are not the same)
I don't think people get pregnant from pressure changes.AgLiving06 said:
I was born 2 days after alicia came through, due to the pressure changes the storm caused.
Funky Winkerbean said:I don't think people get pregnant from pressure changes.AgLiving06 said:
I was born 2 days after alicia came through, due to the pressure changes the storm caused.
oh, it's August alright! pic.twitter.com/2ssZRDaThT
— Weather Geeks (@WeatherGeeks) August 17, 2023