22 Jun 2006 #1 philip_stevens Well-Known Member Joined 16 May 2001 Messages 3,854 Location live near Saint Ives, Cornwall. www.celticwebdesign.net 1058mb at Channel Light Vessel
22 Jun 2006 #2 T tillergirl Well-Known Member Joined 5 Nov 2002 Messages 8,794 Location West Mersea Visit site Umm, that's a steep gradient. It's 1017.2 at the Greenwich
22 Jun 2006 #3 Twister_Ken Well-Known Member Joined 31 May 2001 Messages 27,584 Location 'ang on a mo, I'll just take some bearings Visit site That's gotta be wrong, hasn't it? The wind strengths don't match the pressure gradient.
22 Jun 2006 #4 philip_stevens Well-Known Member Joined 16 May 2001 Messages 3,854 Location live near Saint Ives, Cornwall. www.celticwebdesign.net Most definitely, but it does upset the picture. Alderney is only 1018.
22 Jun 2006 #5 Blue5 Well-Known Member Joined 16 Mar 2006 Messages 2,182 Location Hampshire and Portugal Visit site Yes, Typo should read 1018 according to isobar charts
23 Jun 2006 #6 wooslehunter Well-Known Member Joined 31 Oct 2002 Messages 1,960 Location Hants, UK Visit site Now 1020.
23 Jun 2006 #7 philip_stevens Well-Known Member Joined 16 May 2001 Messages 3,854 Location live near Saint Ives, Cornwall. www.celticwebdesign.net It must have been a glitch in the micro-wave link to Alderney. I would have pushed the tide out a long way though. Anyone know what the highest pressure recorded in the was - and not just in the UK?
It must have been a glitch in the micro-wave link to Alderney. I would have pushed the tide out a long way though. Anyone know what the highest pressure recorded in the was - and not just in the UK?
23 Jun 2006 #8 Twister_Ken Well-Known Member Joined 31 May 2001 Messages 27,584 Location 'ang on a mo, I'll just take some bearings Visit site According to Wikipedia: The highest recorded atmospheric pressure, 108.6 kPa (1086 mbar or 32.06 inches of mercury), occurred at Tosontsengel, Mongolia, 19 December 2001.
According to Wikipedia: The highest recorded atmospheric pressure, 108.6 kPa (1086 mbar or 32.06 inches of mercury), occurred at Tosontsengel, Mongolia, 19 December 2001.