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Old 01-12-2019, 03:23 PM
 
Location: Foreignorland 58 N, 17 E.
5,601 posts, read 3,506,777 times
Reputation: 1006

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Quote:
Originally Posted by Rob93 View Post
Seattle would be pretty good for you and the PNW. Cool all year round although it would also be very wet and cloudy. Perhaps the west coast is best

Good to see you back Rob! Could he rent an RV and do the same in Britain? That'd be much easier than the US for sure
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Old 01-12-2019, 03:44 PM
 
Location: UK
276 posts, read 135,923 times
Reputation: 146
Quote:
Originally Posted by Randomguy1234 View Post
Seattle is not cloudy, more than half of daylight hours are sunny and it has dry summers.
Yes it has dry summers, however it would be perfect year round for the cool and cloudy 30s-60s weather that the OP wants.
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Old 01-12-2019, 03:46 PM
 
Location: UK
276 posts, read 135,923 times
Reputation: 146
Quote:
Originally Posted by lommaren View Post
Good to see you back Rob! Could he rent an RV and do the same in Britain? That'd be much easier than the US for sure
He could indeed although there is much more to see geography wise in the US IMO.
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Old 01-12-2019, 03:55 PM
 
Location: Bidford-on-Avon, England
2,413 posts, read 1,040,369 times
Reputation: 263
Quote:
Originally Posted by Rob93 View Post
Yes it has dry summers, however it would be perfect year round for the cool and cloudy 30s-60s weather that the OP wants.
Not in summer. Seattle has very hot July days and sometimes is scorching.
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Old 01-12-2019, 03:59 PM
 
895 posts, read 604,391 times
Reputation: 370
Quote:
Originally Posted by Randomguy1234 View Post
Not in summer. Seattle has very hot July days and sometimes is scorching.
LOL no.

A/C wasn't necessary for July 2018, the second hottest July ever recorded simply because it was nowhere near "very hot".

The hottest temperature recorded last year was 94 F (34 C) which is nothing considering that there was virtually no humidity.
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Old 01-12-2019, 04:01 PM
 
Location: Bidford-on-Avon, England
2,413 posts, read 1,040,369 times
Reputation: 263
Quote:
Originally Posted by QIDb602 View Post
LOL no.

A/C wasn't necessary for July 2018, the second hottest July ever recorded simply because it was nowhere near "very hot".

The hottest temperature recorded last year was 94 F (34 C) which is nothing considering that there was virtually no humidity.
34°C is scorching. Normal high is 25°C in July which is very hot, and Air con would be needed, imo.
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Old 01-12-2019, 04:05 PM
 
Location: Live:Downtown Phoenix, AZ/Work:Greater Los Angeles, CA
27,606 posts, read 14,610,214 times
Reputation: 9169
Quote:
Originally Posted by Randomguy1234 View Post
34°C is scorching. Normal high is 25°C in July which is very hot, and Air con would be needed, imo.
25°C is NOT very hot

33°C during the day or 36°C at night is very hot I would say
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Old 01-12-2019, 04:09 PM
 
Location: Bidford-on-Avon, England
2,413 posts, read 1,040,369 times
Reputation: 263
[quote=FirebirdCamaro1220;54131149]25°C is NOT very hot

33°C during the day or 36°C at night is very hot I would say

25C is very hot. Horrid too.
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Old 01-12-2019, 04:12 PM
 
Location: Live:Downtown Phoenix, AZ/Work:Greater Los Angeles, CA
27,606 posts, read 14,610,214 times
Reputation: 9169
Quote:
Originally Posted by Randomguy1234 View Post

25C is very hot. Horrid too.
You must have some medical condition or something, 25°C is warm; not very hot to 99% of people
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Old 01-12-2019, 04:14 PM
 
Location: Bidford-on-Avon, England
2,413 posts, read 1,040,369 times
Reputation: 263
Quote:
Originally Posted by FirebirdCamaro1220 View Post
You must have some medical condition or something, 25°C is warm; not very hot to 99% of people
20C is the highest warm temp. 25C is the lowest very hot temp, in between is hot.
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