Davis
Instruments Weather Club
September 2003
In This Issue:
Vantage
Pros Pose for Pretty Portraits

Jaime Johnson's Montana home has all the modern neccesities!
You Weather Club
folks are the best! Ask for a photo or two, and what do we get? A
daily mailbox full of wonderful shots of our far-flung Vantage
Pros
(and a few Weather Monitors for good measure) doing their faithful
weather watching on snow-covered decks, in corn fields, all alone
in the rain, overlooking cold grey waters, and basking in sunny gardens.
There were so many great shots, we wish we could use every one of
them.
Reader Marilyn
Ivey of British Columbia, Canada, sent us a photo and story that
really impressed us; in fact her dramatic photo will be gracing
the inside cover our new catalog even though it’s not of a Vantage
Pro! Back in 1994, Marilyn received a Davis Weather Monitor II for
her birthday, and ever since it has been giving her the pleasure
of daily weather observations. But this summer, the station has
been more than just a fun way for Marilyn to keep up with her weather
passion. Just a few weeks ago, the raging McGillivray Fire threatened
Marilyn’s home and she depended on the station (especially the wind
direction and speed) to warn her when it was time to leave. The
fire came within a quarter mile of her home, but luckily Marilyn,
her family, and her faithful old Weather Monitor II are all alive
and well.
Marilyn is a
member of the Severe Weather Watch Network of Environment Canada
for the Mountain Region, stationed at Kelowna. “Just last week,”
she wrote, “I called in a wind gust reading from the Weather Monitor
II, which was below their usual criteria, but still very significant
given my close proximity to the McGillivray Fire.”
You’ll see Marilyn’s
heroic old station, dwarfed by a huge pyrocumulous cloud in the
background, in our new catalog.
Richard Hagan,
of Los Fresnos, TX sent us a snapshot of his VP with a nice little
tornado in the background – a rare occurrence on the extreme southern
tip of Texas. Tamer Ali Kahfaga, a researcher at Egypt’s St. Katherine
Protectorate Park, sent us a photo of his station atop one of the
highest mountain peaks in Egypt.
Ghilsain Lamothe,
of St. Lazare, Quebec, Canada, sent a picture of his VP Plus alongside
his solar photovoltaic panels -- he uses its radiation sensors to
correlate his panels’ production with actual sun intensity. He mounted
his anemometer on the mast of his small wind turbine to verify the
turbine’s output. Richard Woodbury considered including himself
in the photo of his VP’s anemometer in Durango, CO, which is 8,500
feet above sea level, but to do so, he’d have to climb another 60
feet up the tower upon which it is mounted, which, even for a Davis
cap, sounded kind of scary.
And Philip and
Mignon Riedel couldn’t take a photo of their VP, because it was
currently living in the dark recesses of the wine cellar they built
under their Stirling, Australia, home to house their collection
of fine South Australian wines. According to the VP, wine storage
conditions were perfect, so the station moved back out to its normal
home in the garden.
We’ll save some
other stories and photos for future uses. We wish we could publish
them all, as each one of them is like a page from our Davis family
photo album, but alas, there’s only so much we can ask your computer
to download. But we couldn’t resist sharing one of our personal
favorites. It’s from Jaime Johnson, in East Helena, MT, whose photo
shows just how well he appreciates the finer things in life!
Weather
Check Quiz Question 1: Okay, one more to download:
Where was this picture taken? (Warning: this could be an ongoing
challenge! Memorizing the stories above might help you score big
on future quiz questions!)
Extra
Credit: Is there such a thing as a pyrocumulous cloud, or did
we just make that up?
Phooey, says Physicist, to Mars Mania
Frederick Pilcher,
of the Physics Department of Illinois College in Jacksonville, IL,
wrote to tell us he thinks the whole Mars Mania thing was a bit
overdone. While he agrees that Mars was closest to the Earth on
August 27, he asserts that the degree of that closeness is relatively
unexciting.
“There is more
to the story,” wrote Frederick. “The eccentricity of Mars' orbit
changes cyclically over a time interval of several tens of thousands
of years. The eccentricity is now increasing. This makes the closest
distance between Mars and Sun, and therefore between Earth orbit
and Mars orbit, slowly decrease, less now than in the past 59,619
years. By contrast, as the minimum distance between the two orbits
continues to decrease, we will have an even closer approach in about
another 200 years.”
Frederick, never
one to underestimate our readers’ love for accuracy, goes on to
say that “the significance of this ‘closest’ approach is overblown.
Approaches within 60 million kilometers occur every 15 to 17 years,
and the visibility of Mars through smaller telescopes is nearly
as good as at the current close approach. For northern hemisphere
viewers, the view in September 1988 at slightly greater distance
was even better than what we are now enjoying because Mars was much
higher in the sky and viewed through a smaller column of distorting
air currents.”
Frederick concludes
that “it is every 15 to 17 years, not every 60,000 years, that an
extremely close approach to Mars warrants, and receives, the great
observational attention now being directed to this planet.” Thanks,
Frederick!
(Being in marketing
ourselves, we conclude that the whole Mars Mania stratagem was probably
a particularly well-executed PR campaign; the brain child of some
large greenish brains, housed in enormous greenish heads perched
atop the frail, glowing bodies of the staff of Mars’ leading public
relations firm, which also came up with the whole Martian Face thing,
over which they are still greenishly giggling. Our proof: check
out the Martian Happy
Face crater. Those Martians are nothing if not comedians.)
Top
Secret New Product! (Okay, We’ll Give You A Hint)
Come closer;
we are going to have to write in hushed tones now. We just can’t
resist the temptation to let you in on a little Davis secret. We
just happen to know that the Davis wizards and wizardesses, locked
away up in their tower laboratories, are working on a terrific little
gizmo that will almost certainly be peeking out of many of your
Christmas stockings this year. The bigwigs here at Davis won’t let
us spill all the beans, but maybe we can get away with just a few
hints: It’s small, it’s very sleek and handsome, it’s a technological
wonder, and anyone who does anything outside will want one.
And remember,
if anyone asks, you didn’t hear it from us.
Weather
Check Quiz Question 2: Is it bigger than a breadbox?
New
Product: WeatherLink Downloader
If you use your
weather station for your home or small business, you probably have
no problem downloading your data right to your computer. You connect
either your console or Weather
Envoy in to your computer and that’s it. But many of you may
have remote stations set up at a distance from the computer. For
those uses, we have a quick and easy solution for moving the data
from the field installation to the computer: our New WeatherLink
Downloader which transfers data from a WeatherLink data logger
into your Palm™ Pilot or compatible PDA. From there, it’s a simple
process to transfer the data from the Palm™ Pilot to your PC.
Davis
Equipment Was Unfazed by Isabel’s Wrath
By John
Van Pelt, of The StormStudy Project, a privately funded project
based in North Carolina which educates the public about severe weather
threats. The StormStudy Project also helps gather weather data for
the National Weather Service Forecast Office in Raleigh, through
their affiliation with Central Carolina Skywarn. John took his specially
equipped Storm Study Truck, with a Davis Vantage
Pro mounted on
top, for a visit with Isabel, and filed this report for our readers.
Hurricane Isabel
made landfall in North Carolina and zoomed up the East Coast on
Thursday, September 18, leaving massive damage in its wake from
storm surge, rain and high winds. Many in Isabel’s path will be
without power for weeks or longer and it could take many months
or years to rebuild everything that was damaged. Some of the damage
can never be fixed. Two-hundred-year-old houses were damaged or
destroyed in North Carolina. New channels were formed on the Outer
Banks and the main road, Highway 12, washed out. Virginia took massive
damage; Baltimore’s historic waterfront district was flooded and
worst of all, more than 30 people lost their lives.
As the Project
Lead for The StormStudy Project and a member of the Hurricane
Intercept Research Team, I traveled to
Atlantic Beach, NC, to help document Isabel’s landfall by collecting
data and shooting still photos and video of the storm’s impending
strike, landfall, and aftermath. Davis Instruments gear was with
us every minute and every mile of the trip and performed flawlessly
during even the worst of the storm in our staging area – luckily
only 69 mph gusts, but with winds sustained in the 40’s and 50’s
many hours after landfall.
The Hurricane
Intercept Research Team’s Chevy Tahoe and StormStudy Truck both
used Davis Instruments equipment to record data and display it,
and, in many cases, broadcast live on national and international
TV during the entire event. We also set up an additional Wireless
Weather Monitor II EasyMount station using a Vantage Pro console
and anemometer to record the data at our hotel location. For the
next storm, we’ll use our wireless Internet connection to send the
live data to our sites.
As the winds
howled, sometimes driving rain at nearly 70 mph and other times
whipping sand at the same speeds, we watched the ocean surge forward
and the shingles flap on buildings as Isabel rushed in and then
turned northward. This was a great shakedown test for our portable
equipment and as always, the Weather
Monitor II’s in the HIRT Tahoe
and the Vantage Pro in the StormStudy Truck worked like we expected
them to – perfectly. We’re ready for the next storm and with our
Davis wireless repeaters and multiple weather stations, and we’re
excited about the possibilities for sharing our data with the world
again, this time from multiple locations in the storm’s path in
real time.
Weather
Check Quiz Question 3: What does the acronym CPI stand for?
Tech
Tips: Davis Wind Cups vs Hurricane
Since Isabel
(and now Marty, on this side of the US) has recently treated many
of our weather stations to some very high winds, the question comes
up: How high a wind speed is too high for our anemometers?
Well, if all
we were dealing with was wind, Isabel didn’t pack enough punch –
as John Van Pelt found – to overtax our anemometers. Our large
cups are tested in our wind tunnel to perform up to wind speeds
of 150 mph; the small
cups are tested and “specked” at a max of 175 mph. We got some
interesting field verification of these specs when a hurricane blew
through the Caribbean a few years back. A customer called from an
island to tell us that his large wind cups and his friend’s small
wind cups, just prior to breaking, recorded in the 150's and 170's
respectively.
However, in
a hurricane situation, there is often more than just air hitting
those wind cups. Hurricane force winds are full of debris, which
can damage or break our anemometers. This is an unavoidable factor
in measuring such high force winds – anything that would block debris
would also block wind.
(We had another
customer who reported sitting in his bathtub with his console, while
a hurricane raged outside, , watching the gusts hit the 170’s, and
then suddenly stop. Oh, it wasn’t the anemometer that broke; it
was the roof on which the station was mounted that took leave of
the rest of the house…)
Another factor
in the durability of your anemometer is age. As with any piece of
equipment constantly exposed to the sun, after several years, the
plastic of the anemometer can begin to weaken from ultra violet
degradation. For most weather station owners, this slight weakening
would not affect the anemometer’s performance. But if you intend
to subject yours to high winds (i.e., you live in hurricane country)
and your wind cups are more than a two or three years old, you might
consider replacing them before the next big blow.
Weather
Check Quiz Question 4: In the San Felipe hurricane of 1928,
at least 1,836 people died, mostly from the massive flooding from
Lake Okeechobee. But an unknown number of those killed died because
of a “side effect” of the storm. What was it?
A. Ignorance
of electrocution danger from downed, recently installed power lines;
B. Typhoid
poisoning from drinking well water contaminated by flood waters;
C. Bites
from water moccasins which had already taken refuge in the trees
people climbed to escape the water;
D. The collapse
of a church roof caused by the weight of the entire congregation
which refused to evacuate and instead chose to await rescue by angelic
personages.
“Good
Morning, Davyjonesville! The Forecast is For a Beautiful Day, Thanks
To The Summer Upwelling and a Glorious Plankton Bloom!”
The San
Francisco Chronicle’s science writer Carl T. Hall treated
us to a fascinating weather – ocean weather that is -- story to
peruse over our coffee last Sunday morning. One might think that
weather conditions on the ocean’s surface are inconsequential to
the “weather” a few feet down; in fact, one might think that the
ocean, at a given location and depth, is so protected from “weather”
that its inhabitants would face day after day of the same “forecast.”
However, as
Hall explained, “A subtle change in wind speed and direction can
nudge vast amounts of water in different direction, rippling all
through the marine environment, affecting nutrient levels, fisheries,
and military operations in ways scientists are only beginning to
understand.”
But scientists
are certainly trying. Hall reported that 14 institutions, coordinated
by James Bellingham of the Monterey
Bay Aquarium Research Institute, spent a good part of the summer
collecting vast amounts of data from the deep ocean canyon of Monterey
Bay. By tackling the problem of measuring the always-changing tides,
temperatures, and biology of the bay, the scientists embarked on
“one of the most intensive studies of sea conditions ever undertaken.”
The idea is
come up with a way to forecast ocean weather for purposes ranging
from protection of endangered marine animals to military uses. But
if predicting atmospheric weather is difficult, ocean weather is
vastly more complicated. For one thing, the scale is much smaller;
for another, marine life creates environmental changes. Where atmospheric
meteorologist work with scales in the thousands of kilometers, and
with consideration of rather static biological conditions with limited
affect on weather, ocean meteorologists must work with scales in
the tens or hundreds of kilometers, and with biological changes
that can change the water’s physical and chemical state over a matter
of hours. Where would you begin?
The very interesting
story is currently on the Chronicle’s
website.
Weather
Check Quiz Question 5: According to the Chronicle story, one
of the measurements scientists took was done with a device called
a bathyphotometer. What were they measuring?
A. The depth
to which sunlight penetrates enough to sustain photosynthetic plankton;
B. The presence
of light-emitting dinoflagellates;
C. The growth
rate of algae and kelp in relation to depth and tidal action;
D. The presence
of bath products, such as Mr. Bubble, which inhibits underwater
photography but leaves scientists feeling frisky and clean.
You're
Brilliant! Answers to Quiz Questions
Question
1:
James Rice took this photo (it’s actually a composite of three photos)
of a storm hitting the pits area at Bonneville
Salt Flats, near Wendover, Utah at Southern
California Timing Association’s (SCTA) Speed Week in August.
He wrote, “Thursday afternoon, a wind storm came through that immediately
halted racing for the day. The weather station reported gusts over
60 mph, and sustained wind at 49 mph. While running around to secure
everything from blowing away I shot a few pictures. Looks like a
storm to me.”
Extra Credit:
Of course there is! We wouldn’t make up such a thing! Our old friend
Brian Yeaton, of the Weather Notebook,
writes that fire can create weather. As the smoke from a large fire
rises, a large cumulo nimbus type cloud -- made mostly of smoke
-- can form at the top of the column. The plume itself can grow
into a full blown storm because of the moisture in the smoke from
burning vegetation. Brian writes that these ascending masses of
warm, moist air can act very much like thunderstorms – complete
with wind and rain. “Lightning from pyrocumulous clouds,” Brian
writes, “can actually start other fires downwind from the original
source. At the same time, rain from pyrocumulous clouds can sometimes
put fires out. The biggest concern for firefighters when these conditions
develop is wind. Downdrafts created by the thunderstorm conditions
can cause fires to suddenly switch directions, and can even cause
powerful tornados of fire.”
Question
2: We have never actually seen a breadbox, but imagine that it must be big enough to fit a loaf, rather than a slice, of California sourdough. But even if your breadbox will only hold a single stale bagel, our new gizmo will fit in there!
Question
3: If you said, “Consumer Price Index,” you are reading the
wrong newsletter. This is weather, not economics!! As far as us
weather geeks are concerned, CPI stands for Central Pressure Index,
which estimates the barometric pressure in the eye of a particular
hurricane. Since lower barometric pressure in a hurricane generally
translates to higher velocity winds, the lower the CPI, the higher
the winds. For a fun and informative website, check out
Dr. George Pararas-Carayanns’s (he refers to himself simply
as Dr. George P.C.) web pages on phenomena he clearly loves: hurricanes, hurricane storm surge,
Tsunamis, and earthquakes.
Question
4: Unfortunately, it was C. As people discovered they could
not outrun the flood waters on the road from Bell Glade to Pahokee,
they climbed trees
which were already inhabited by other
evacuating vertebrates unwilling to share. (Source:The Old Farmers
Almanac: Book of Weather and Natural Disasters, by Benjamin
A. Watson.)
Question
5: B. Dinoflagellates are “single-celled sea creatures of many types, some of which serve as an important marine food source.” And you thought they were dinosaurs who carried whips! That’s silly – dinosaurs didn’t live in the sea!
Who You Gonna Call?
Each month after the E-News goes out, we receive messages back.
Sometimes the messages are in response to a story we shared; other
times they are a request for help of some kind. We read all the
emails, answer those we can, and pass the rest on to the appropriate
departments.
We think you
should know, though, that if you're interested in the fastest possible
reply, news@davisnet.com
may not be the best place to send your message. Questions about
how things work should be addressed to tech support directly at
support@davisnet.com.
For general information about the products, such as how much cable
comes with a station contact sales@davisnet.com.
To request a catalog, youll find links for catalog requests
on our web site at http://www.davisnet.com/contact/catalog.asp
Please continue
to send your comments, weather URLs, and story suggestions to news@davisnet.com.
We look forward to getting your comments and any responses you have
to the E-News. Member participation is what keeps the E-News alive
and kicking.
Well, thats
it for this edition. Youll be hearing from us again next month!
Vantage Pro,
Weather Monitor, Weather Wizard, WeatherLink, Weather Envoy, Weather
Echo and Weather Echo Plus, EZ Mount Gro Weather, EZ Mount EnviroMonitor,
EZ Mount Health EnviroMonitor, and Perception are trademarks of
Davis Instruments Corp
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