Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2000/12/23
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]Dante A Stella jotted down the following: > I dare both of you to come tripod shooting in Detroit, where the wind chill > has hit a balmy -39 F (to say nothing of what it would be centigrade) and the > temperature is 5 degrees. Better get something with a leaf shutter and plate > film. (sigh) Windchill is a psychological effect. Is the is perceived "coldness" of the air when there is wind present. In terms of "temperature" it only affects living organisms comprised primarily of water. Non-living matter is affected by the wind only with regards to how quickly its temperature will drop to that of the ambient level. It will not go below this. So, if the ambient temperature is 5F, then the coldest your tripod/camera/whatever will get is 5F, regardless of whether there is a gale-force wind blowing or not. It'll *reach* 5F sooner in a gale-force wind, though (assuming it hasn't blown off ;) The psychology comes into it because to humans, 5F with a certain wind force will *feel* like -39F without any wind at all. It's all because our body is working overtime (due to increased evaporation) to keep our internals cozy and warm. Which is where anyone with any sense chooses to be when the windchill reached -39F. Now, all of you with degrees in geophysical fluid dynamics, specifically boundary layer climates, are welcome to start a new thread were you beat this issue to death. Please mark it "OT: Martin's dead wrong (was: windchill)" so that I can automatically forward all the messages to my trash can... ;) M. - -- Martin Howard | "We can't make mistakes like that on our Visiting Scholar, CSEL, OSU | own. We need computers to help us." email: howard.390@osu.edu | -- A pharmacologist on computerization www: http://mvhoward.i.am/ +-------------------------------------------