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View Poll Results: Which option do you prefer?
Option A 3 8.82%
Option B 7 20.59%
Option C 4 11.76%
Option D 12 35.29%
Option E 2 5.88%
Option F 0 0%
Option G 1 2.94%
Option H 4 11.76%
Option I 4 11.76%
Option J 2 5.88%
Option K 3 8.82%
Option L 9 26.47%
Multiple Choice Poll. Voters: 34. You may not vote on this poll

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Old 04-17-2020, 05:29 PM
 
Location: Putnam County, TN
1,056 posts, read 726,570 times
Reputation: 715

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Quote:
Originally Posted by YoIronFistBro View Post
Somewhere between D and L, I love warm dry days. My ideal range would look something like this.
6am: 19C/66F, Foggy
2pm: 26C/79F, Sunny
10pm: 21C/70F, Clear
3am: 17C/61F, Mostly Clear

So maybe "San Diego-style" Mediterranean/Semiarid?
That'd be nice! San Diego is a great climate for mild-weather lovers like me, too, and it's not even on the warm end like Los Angeles nor cool end like San Francisco (still both ideal climates for someone like me).
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Old 04-18-2020, 02:11 AM
 
Location: Live:Downtown Phoenix, AZ/Work:Greater Los Angeles, CA
27,606 posts, read 14,610,214 times
Reputation: 9169
Quote:
Originally Posted by Sun Belt-lover L.A.M. View Post
That'd be nice! San Diego is a great climate for mild-weather lovers like me, too, and it's not even on the warm end like Los Angeles nor cool end like San Francisco (still both ideal climates for someone like me).
Coastal LA and Coastal San Diego have the same weather. LA appears warmer because Downtown San Diego is on the water while Downtown LA is 15 miles inland. Go 15 miles inland in San Diego and it's just as warm as Downtown LA
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Old 04-18-2020, 03:40 AM
 
Location: Lancashire, United Kingdom
88 posts, read 47,056 times
Reputation: 65
Quote:
Originally Posted by FirebirdCamaro1220 View Post
Temp°F+40=X
X*0.555=Y
Y-40=Temp°C

Or

Temp°C+40=X
X*1.8=Y
Y-40=Temp°F

These work because - 40°C = - 40°F
And 1.8°F=1°C as well as 0.555°C=1°F
An easier method (but slightly less accurate one) is to:

Temp°C x2 +30 = Temp°F

Temp°F -30 /2 = Temp°C


Example

15°C x2 = 30
30 x2 = 60
15°C = 60°F


80°F -30 = 50
50 /2 = 25
80°F = 25°C
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Old 04-18-2020, 03:51 AM
 
Location: Lancashire, United Kingdom
88 posts, read 47,056 times
Reputation: 65
Like tenkier7, I voted for options Option C, J, K, & L, as they are the most comfortable and most temperate options. Though I would take Rejaviks cool and cloudy weather over a lot of the other hot and humid climates any day.

Alougth I'm surprised the OP made Seattle so sunny as that climate is well known for its cloud and rain. I'm not sure 22°C and sunny would be typical mid-summer weather for Seattle.
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Old 04-18-2020, 04:28 AM
 
Location: Putnam County, TN
1,056 posts, read 726,570 times
Reputation: 715
Quote:
Originally Posted by Mr Burns View Post
Alougth I'm surprised the OP made Seattle so sunny as that climate is well known for its cloud and rain. I'm not sure 22°C and sunny would be typical mid-summer weather for Seattle.
They're very cloudy and moderately rainy from April through October, but that's not the case year-round. Contrary to their reputation, Seattle is actually a mild-summer Mediterranean climate; it's just gloomy in most of spring AND most of autumn, leaving most of the year's sun in May through September. Being so far north also means it'd probably *feel* gloomy there for some (including myself) even if winters were very dry and sunny, as the days would be short, sun angle low and UV index low.

The Hoh Rainforest is in the mountains some distance away, just like how you don't enter the Appalachian Rainforest as soon as you leave Knoxville to the east. Seattle itself is in a rain shadow. High mountains and historic reputations can be deceptive.
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