Weather forcast changes WA BOM and wkend west ?

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king of the point
king of the point
WA
1836 posts
WA, 1836 posts
3 Nov 2012 1:50pm
Got a WA weekend west paper looked at the weather maps only to be totally confused as there using KMPH instead of KNOTS whats going on

SO

I go direct on the internet to the WA BOM coastal waters and they changed all the area wind forcasting locations and added heaps of stuff.

At least there talking KNOTS for marine forcasts

Now im just trying to work out where there talking about.
TWO ROCKS is now famous ? Not just for car jackens , bumming smokes,and burning cars

Just after a quick forcast not a new education ......

What do you reckon ..........

Does this mean Seabreeze (laurie) your on the move with updates to
GypsyDrifter
GypsyDrifter
WA
2371 posts
WA, 2371 posts
3 Nov 2012 4:26pm
There was some guy on the radio the other day stating that they now can forecast the weather accurately for about 2 to 4 days I think he said..(so you will actually know what the weather is doing on the weekends)...

hence the bom site has been changed

Go figure..I thought for forecasting weather...they used a dartboard
hamburglar
hamburglar
ACT
2174 posts
ACT, 2174 posts
4 Nov 2012 10:39am
i'm stuck on "you got a paper "
Mark _australia
Mark _australia
WA
23684 posts
WA, 23684 posts
4 Nov 2012 7:59pm
I see they changed the basic layout of the BOM site. A little more readable (or dumbed down) on the marine page I guess.

As to km/h instead of knots it does not surprise me. The news stations obviously have never heard of knots and think kn is same as km

Sooo many times I have had a solid 4.7 afternoon so it is a good 25 - 30kn and then watch the 5:30pm news and they say is is "SSW 25 kilometres per hour". Yes fair enough it is Mt Lawley weather station, but no fkn way is it 25kph after a fatman just used 4.7 all afternoon.... it is 25 bloody KN not 25 KM
When ch9 were promoting weather girl Angela Tsun as having studied weather and being sooo qualified (not just a blonde in a tight dress) I laughed my arse off when she was talking about "currently 30kmh winds" when trees were bending in half.

Retards.



Bring back Beaufort scale, then we can hear about using a 10m in Force9 instead of 60kn in the kite forum

king of the point
king of the point
WA
1836 posts
WA, 1836 posts
5 Nov 2012 12:53pm
Yer the layout on the BOM is hard to read ..ie...they need to at least highlight the areas of the coast your looking for as it is its one big long forcast ,you keep loosing your place of reference

As for the papers using kmph thats stupid and only adds confusion
some one knows the conversion ???????
5knots = kmph
10
15
20
25
30
35
40
45
50
55
60
Ps where the hell is that suburb in perth there giving the perth area coastal water forcast from .............carnt recall the name.... south of perth ???????
Mark _australia
Mark _australia
WA
23684 posts
WA, 23684 posts
5 Nov 2012 1:18pm
Nautical miles per hour conversion to k's is 1.85 (normal miles is 1.6)

10kn = 18kph near enough

etc.

Where it gets fun -

US and UK nautical miles are so close it does not matter, basically it is 1.85.
so 1 knot is one nautical mile per hour.
or 1.85 kph. Easy.

But yank sailors often talk about sailing in "20mph winds". Do they mean 20 nautical miles per hour which is 20kn, or 20mph which is different?
Typical for them to confuse everyone.


doggie
doggie
WA
15849 posts
WA, 15849 posts
5 Nov 2012 2:07pm
Mark _australia said...
Nautical miles per hour conversion to k's is 1.85 (normal miles is 1.6)

10kn = 18kph near enough

etc.

Where it gets fun -

US and UK nautical miles are so close it does not matter, basically it is 1.85.
so 1 knot is one nautical mile per hour.
or 1.85 kph. Easy.

But yank sailors often talk about sailing in "20mph winds". Do they mean 20 nautical miles per hour which is 20kn, or 20mph which is different?
Typical for them to confuse everyone.





Lets save confusion and change it all to kph
rod_bunny
rod_bunny
WA
1089 posts
WA, 1089 posts
5 Nov 2012 2:24pm
or meters a second like some places in europe.
Mark _australia
Mark _australia
WA
23684 posts
WA, 23684 posts
5 Nov 2012 9:40pm
doggie said...
Mark _australia said...
Nautical miles per hour conversion to k's is 1.85 (normal miles is 1.6)

10kn = 18kph near enough

etc.

Where it gets fun -

US and UK nautical miles are so close it does not matter, basically it is 1.85.
so 1 knot is one nautical mile per hour.
or 1.85 kph. Easy.

But yank sailors often talk about sailing in "20mph winds". Do they mean 20 nautical miles per hour which is 20kn, or 20mph which is different?
Typical for them to confuse everyone.





Lets save confusion and change it all to kph


Be quiet, non-windsports-person.

There is NO confusion in Australia my flatwater friend, knots has always been nautical miles per hour and the old school measurement of knots (if you go back far enough) had a slight variation between yanks and poms. Considering Poms discovered the USA by arriving in fkn boats, how the Yanks then got nautical miles wrong is beyond belief. Like everything else they butchered like the English language but anyway....

Knots has been the accepted standard forever, I see no reason to make forecasts in the newspaper / TV in kph.

People who can't visualise 10kn winds also have no idea what 15kph winds feel like. They just wanna know 'is it going to be rainy or really windy for my picnic?
Any more detail is for the enthusiast like us here, or fisho's, or pilots, so leave it in bloody KNOTS. FFS.







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