psousa
Well-Known Member
Hi!
In my particular situation, I get them from Saildocs but I tried Windyty too and it's similar so, I guess, the source is not relevant for my question.
Anyway, today I was checking the gribs for Biscay and I found a big difference for the wave size when compared with a reading from a ship (from http://www.ndbc.noaa.gov/radial_search.php?lat1=45.230N&lon1=5.000W&uom=E&dist=250).
So, at 9am, the ship, located at 44.10,-4.30, has reported a WVHT reading of 9,8ft (~3mt).
For the same time and position and talking about prediction (models are all about predictions, I guess), Windyty using "ECMWF WAM" model shows 1,5mt, Windyty using 'Wavewatch 3' shows 1,3mt. Models from Saildocs shows 1.3mts too.
Anyone knows how do these ships reads this? I know the models it's a average of the higher 1/3 of the waves or something like that, right? Could this ship reading to be a pontual max reading instead of an average?
Thank you!
In my particular situation, I get them from Saildocs but I tried Windyty too and it's similar so, I guess, the source is not relevant for my question.
Anyway, today I was checking the gribs for Biscay and I found a big difference for the wave size when compared with a reading from a ship (from http://www.ndbc.noaa.gov/radial_search.php?lat1=45.230N&lon1=5.000W&uom=E&dist=250).
So, at 9am, the ship, located at 44.10,-4.30, has reported a WVHT reading of 9,8ft (~3mt).
For the same time and position and talking about prediction (models are all about predictions, I guess), Windyty using "ECMWF WAM" model shows 1,5mt, Windyty using 'Wavewatch 3' shows 1,3mt. Models from Saildocs shows 1.3mts too.
Anyone knows how do these ships reads this? I know the models it's a average of the higher 1/3 of the waves or something like that, right? Could this ship reading to be a pontual max reading instead of an average?
Thank you!
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