Dr. Jeff Masters' WunderBlog

Wunderground launches high-definition radar product
Posted by: Dr. Jeff Masters, 2:46 PM GMT on December 15, 2008 +22
The Terminal Doppler Weather Radar (TDWR) is an advanced technology weather radar deployed near 45 of the larger airports in the U.S. The radars were developed and deployed by the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) beginning in 1994, as a response to several disastrous jetliner crashes in the 1970s and 1980s caused by strong thunderstorm winds. The crashes occurred because of wind shear--a sudden change in wind speed and direction. Wind shear is common in thunderstorms, due to a downward rush of air called a microburst or downburst. The TDWRs can detect such dangerous wind shear conditions, and have been instrumental in enhancing aviation safety in the U.S. over the past 15 years. The TDWRs also measure the same quantities as our familiar network of 148 NEXRAD WSR-88D Doppler radars--precipitation intensity, winds, rainfall rate, echo tops, etc. However, the newer Terminal Doppler Weather Radars are higher resolution, and can "see" details in much finer detail close to the radar. This high-resolution data has generally not been available to the public until now. Thanks to a collaboration between the National Weather Service (NWS) and the FAA, the data for all 45 TDWRs will be made available in real time over the next few months via a free satellite broadcast (NOAAPORT). Six radar sites are already available (Figure 1), and the remaining radars will be added by June 2009. I'm pleased to announce that the Weather Underground is now making the TDWR data available to the public, and will be adding new sites as they become available. We're calling them "High-Def" stations on our NEXRAD radar page. The six TDWR sites available so far are:

Detroit, MI
Cleveland, OH
Fort Lauderdale, FL
Miami, FL
West Palm Beach, FL
Newark, NJ

Since thunderstorms are uncommon along the West Coast and Northwest U.S., there are no TDWRs in California, Oregon, Washington, Montana, or Idaho.


Figure 1. The network of 45 Terminal Doppler Weather Radar (TDWR) stations in the U.S.

Summary of the TDWR products
The TDWR products are very similar to those available for the traditional WSR-88D NEXRAD sites. There is the standard radar reflectivity image, available at each of three different tilt angles of the radar, plus Doppler velocity of the winds in precipitation areas. There are 16 colors assigned to the short range reflectivity data (same as the WSR-88Ds), but 256 colors assigned to the long range reflectivity data and all of the velocity data. Thus, you will see up to 16 times as many colors in these displays versus the corresponding WSR-88D display, giving much higher detail of storm features. The TDWRs also have storm total precipitation available in the standard 16 colors like the WSR-88D has, or in 256 colors (the new "Digital Precipitation" product). Note, however, that the TDWR rainfall products generally underestimate precipitation, due to attenuation problems (see below). The TDWRs also have such derived products as echo height, vertically integrated liquid water, and VAD winds. These are computed using the same algorithms as the WSR-88Ds use, and thus have no improvement in resolution.

Improved horizontal resolution of TDWRs
The TDWR is designed to operate at short range, near the airport of interest, and has a limited area of high-resolution coverage--just 48 nm, compared to the 124 nm of the conventional WSR-88Ds. The WSR-88Ds use a 10 cm radar wavelength, but the TDWRs use a much shorter 5 cm wavelength. This shorter wavelength allow the TDWRs to see details as small as 150 meters along the beam, at the radar's regular range of 48 nm. This is nearly twice the resolution of the NEXRAD WSR-88D radars, which see details as small as 250 meters at their close range (out to 124 nm). At longer ranges (48 to 225 nm), the TDWRs have a resolution of 300 meters--more than three times better than the 1000 meter resolution WSR-88Ds have at their long range (124 to 248 nm). The angular (azimuth) resolution of the TDWR is nearly twice what is available in the WSR-88D. Each radial in the TDWR has a beam width of 0.55 degrees. The average beam width for the WSR-88D is 0.95 degrees. At distances within 48 nm of the TDWR, these radars can pick out the detailed structure of tornadoes and other important weather features (Figure 2). Extra detail can also been seen at long-ranges, and the TDWRs should give us more detailed depictions of a hurricane's spiral bands as it approaches the coast.


Figure 2. View of a tornado taken by conventional WSR-88D NEXRAD radar (left) and the higher-resolution TDWR system (right). Using the conventional radar, it is difficult to see the hook-shape of the radar echo, while the TDWR clearly depicts the hook echo, as well as the Rear-Flank Downdraft (RFD) curling into the hook. Image credit: National Weather Service.

No change to time resolution
Like the old NEXRAD data, the new TDWR data will update once every six minutes. The NWS advertises that the TDWR data will be sent out within one minute of when it is measured. The TDWR does scan the atmosphere once per minute at the lowest elevation angle of the radar, but unfortunately, there are no plans to make this rapid scan data available via the free public NOAAPORT feed.

Attenuation problems
The most serious drawback to using the TDWRs is the attenuation of the signal due to heavy precipitation falling near the radar. Since the TDWRs use the shorter 5 cm wavelength, which is closer to the size of a raindrop than the 10 cm wavelength used by the traditional WSR-88Ds, the TDWR beam is more easily absorbed and scattered away by precipitation. This attenuation means that the radar cannot "see" very far through heavy rain. It is often the case that a TDWR will completely miss seeing tornado signatures when there is heavy rain falling between the radar and the tornado. Hail causes even more trouble (Figure 3). Thus, it is best to use the TDWR in conjunction with the traditional WSR-88D radar to insure nothing is missed.


Figure 3. View of a squall line (left) taken using a TDWR (left column) and a WSR-88D system. A set of three images going from top to bottom show the squall line's reflectivity as it approaches the TDWR radar, moves over the TDWR, than moves away. Note that when the heavy rain of the squall line is over the TDWR, it can "see" very little of the squall line. On the right, we can see the effect a strong thunderstorm with hail has on a TDWR. The radar (located in the lower left corner of the image) cannot see much detail directly behind the heavy pink echoes that denote the core of the hail region, creating a "shadow". Image credit: National Weather Service.

Range unfolding and aliasing problems
Another serious drawback to using the TDWRs is the high uncertainty of the returned radar signal reaching the receiver. Since the radar is geared towards examining the weather in high detail at short range, echoes that come back from features that lie at longer ranges suffer from what is called range folding and aliasing. For example, for a thunderstorm lying 48 nm from the radar, the radar won't be able to tell if the thunderstorm is at 48 nm, or some multiple of 48 nm, such as 96 or 192 nm. In regions where the software can't tell the distance, the reflectivity display will have black missing data regions extending radially towards the radar (Figure 4). Missing velocity data will be colored pink and labeled "RF" (Range Folded). In some cases, the range folded velocity data will be in the form of curved arcs that extend radially towards the radar.


Figure 4. Typical errors seen in the velocity data (left) and reflectivity data (right) when range folding and aliasing are occurring. Image credit: National Weather Service.

Ground clutter problems
Since the TDWRs are designed to alert airports of low-level wind shear problems, the radar beam is pointed very close to the ground and is very narrow. The lowest elevation angle for the TDWRs ranges from 0.1° to 0.3°, depending upon how close the radar is to the airport of interest. In contrast, the lowest elevation angle of the WSR-88Ds is 0.5°. As a result, the TDWRs are very prone to ground clutter from buildings, water towers, hills, etc. Many radars have permanent "shadows" extending radially outward due to nearby obstructions. The TDWR software is much more aggressive about removing ground clutter than the WSR-88D software is. This means that real precipitation echoes of interest will sometimes get removed.

For more information
For those of you who are storm buffs that will be regularly using the new TDWR data, I highly recommend that you download the three Terminal Doppler Weather Radar (TDWR) Build 3 Training modules. These three Flash files, totaling about 40 Mb, give one a detailed explanation of how TDWRs work, and their strengths and weaknesses. There is also a full product documentation guide available. I'll be adding the info in this blog entry into the radar help link available on each of our radar pages.

No Atlantic named storm likely this week
The models continue to indicate an extratropical storm that has the potential to evolve into a named subtropical storm will form in the middle Atlantic by Thursday. However, it now appears that there will be too much wind shear for Subtropical Storm Rene to form out of this system.

I'm in San Francisco this week for the annual meeting of the American Geophysical Union, the world's largest climate change conference. I'll be posting daily "post cards" from the conference this week.

Jeff Masters
Categories: Tornado
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51. zoomiami 1:12 AM GMT on December 16, 2008    
Hi Pottery - everyone is out shopping or hiding.

I've updated my blog with some santa pics - and some how they all relate to those on the blogs.

Do need help with the first one though - leave a comment about who it best portrays. Would love to have comments and other peoples pics - something fun to do in off season.

Member Since: August 13, 2007 Posts: 10 Comments: 4064
52. HadesGodWyvern 1:34 AM GMT on December 16, 2008    
Mauritius Meteorological Services
Tropical Cyclone Warning Number TWO
PERTURBATION TROPICALE 04-20082009
4:00 AM Reunion December 16 2008
======================================

At 0:00 AM UTC, Tropical Disturbance (1002 hPa) located at 9.4S 68.6E has 10 minute sustained winds of 20 knots with gust of 30 knots. The disturbance is reported as moving west at 4 knots.

Dvorak Intensity: T1.5

Forecast and Intensity
=========================
24 HRS: 09.8S 65.9E - 25 knots (PERTURBATION TROPICALE)
48 HRS: 10.4S 63.3E - 30 knots (DEPRESSION TROPICALE)
72 HRS: 11.2S 60.8E - 25 knots (PERTURBATION TROPICALE)

Additional Information
======================
Convective activity has built close to the center but is fluctuating and remains scattered. The system is barely organized. This system evolves within a neutral environment: Wind shear is weak, upper level divergence is good but weak equatorward, low level inflow is established poleward but not equatorwards. Available NWP models analyze this low and track it west-southwest along the northern periphery of the subtropical high.

AT THIS STAGE, THIS SYSTEM DOES NOT JUSTIFY ISSUANCE OF REGULAR WARNINGS
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53. HadesGodWyvern 1:36 AM GMT on December 16, 2008    
38. BahaHurican 10:26 PM GMT on December 15, 2008

Hey HGW. Isn't this relatively early for them? I don't remember seeing a notice of a potential storm in SW Indian before January any time recently. Also, any reports on what's expected for the season down south? I'm under some heavy deadlines this week, or I'd pull whatever I find and post it myself.
-----

Baha, no not really the southwest indian ocean cyclone season starts late October (they already had Asma and Bernard this season). It's the Australia and South Pacific cyclone season that starts around December/January.
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54. HadesGodWyvern 1:38 AM GMT on December 16, 2008    
as for how many cyclone for the southern hemisphere I seen about 10 for Australia and 10 for Fiji region.. so it might be an active season down south.

There is also a cyclone potential for Australia right now (Western Australia region)
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55. pottery 1:43 AM GMT on December 16, 2008    
Trinidad weather now
time 9:40 pm
temp 75 f
humidity 93%
wind calm

Its going to get a little chilly here around 4:00 am. Forecast is for 71 F.
Mustbe Christmas, or Winter, or something.......
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56. sugarsand 1:48 AM GMT on December 16, 2008    
Quoting pottery:
Trinidad weather now
time 9:40 pm
temp 75 f
humidity 93%
wind calm

Its going to get a little chilly here around 4:00 am. Forecast is for 71 F.
Mustbe Christmas, or Winter, or something.......

Ho ho ho Pottery! Had to turn the a/c on tonight. Very humid. Maybe it's the wine:)
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57. pottery 1:51 AM GMT on December 16, 2008    
Hi there Sugar.
Yep, could be the wine. then again, it could be the weather LOL
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58. sugarsand 1:55 AM GMT on December 16, 2008    
Wine, weather, it's all good.
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59. GatorWX 2:02 AM GMT on December 16, 2008    
Does anyone know the final death toll rom Ike in the US? Can't findany updated info. Thanks
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60. all4hurricanes 2:02 AM GMT on December 16, 2008    
Quoting GatorWX:
Does anyone know what th final death toll from Ike was in the US? I can't find any new information regarding this. Thankyou. PS, it's freaking hot in swFL and muggy too! Looks lik a warm hristmas this year :(

Wikipedia says 126 direct, 38 indirect, 202 missing so pretty bad
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61. AstroHurricane001 2:04 AM GMT on December 16, 2008    
Quoting all4hurricanes:

Wikipedia says 126 direct, 38 indirect, 202 missing so pretty bad

It's pretty cold where I am in S. Ontario, and windy too. Any water on the ground from today's rain and snow melt has frozen solid.
Member Since: August 30, 2008 Posts: 8 Comments: 2811
62. zoomiami 2:12 AM GMT on December 16, 2008    
First an early ice storm takes out all the electric, and now they have record highs in southern Maine. 57 with snow forecasted for the next few days. The weather is certainly weird.

No wonder the kid has strep.
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63. GatorWX 2:14 AM GMT on December 16, 2008    
I just looked at Wikipedia, but that's been their figure for a couple months, so the people certainly aren't still classified as missing. I imagine many or most of ths listed there as missing were people who relocated or had no communication. Thankyou for the response
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64. GatorWX 2:16 AM GMT on December 16, 2008    
Astro, are you from TX?
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65. conchygirl 2:24 AM GMT on December 16, 2008    
Quoting sugarsand:

Ho ho ho Pottery! Had to turn the a/c on tonight. Very humid. Maybe it's the wine:)
me too sugar.....very humid, but agree possibly the wine! LOL
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66. sugarsand 2:29 AM GMT on December 16, 2008    
Hey CG!
Cheers!
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67. conchygirl 2:35 AM GMT on December 16, 2008    
Quoting sugarsand:
Hey CG!
Cheers!
Hi Sugarsand: Ready for the holidays? Blog pretty quiet but as to be expected this time of the year!

I do see that Pottery is around too!
Member Since: June 11, 2008 Posts: 24 Comments: 5910
68. BahaHurican 2:36 AM GMT on December 16, 2008    
Quoting HadesGodWyvern:
as for how many cyclone for the southern hemisphere I seen about 10 for Australia and 10 for Fiji region.. so it might be an active season down south.

There is also a cyclone potential for Australia right now (Western Australia region)
That's pretty high for Oz. They are usually around 6-7 average, I think. Fiji area is usually a bit more active.

Well, at least we are likely to stay occupied during the ATL off-season . . . lol

Once things let up on me at work this week I'll be paying more attention, have time to catch up [and read back].
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69. zoomiami 2:37 AM GMT on December 16, 2008    
Hi Conchy - how's it going? Almost 80 today - air was back on again. If we only lived a few hours north....
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70. zoomiami 2:38 AM GMT on December 16, 2008    
Baha - you are only imagining that its going to get slower - its a myth that they use to keep us poor fools working hard.
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71. conchygirl 2:39 AM GMT on December 16, 2008    
Quoting zoomiami:
Hi Conchy - how's it going? Almost 80 today - air was back on again. If we only lived a few hours north....
Hey Zoo - us too air came back on - didn't make 80 but still warm and humid. May have to head down your way soon as my Aunt is in the hospital.
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72. zoomiami 2:39 AM GMT on December 16, 2008    
Sorry to hear that, not fun when family is sick over the holidays.
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73. BahaHurican 2:40 AM GMT on December 16, 2008    
I've been kinda curious about the final number of deaths for Ike as well. I notice the NHC report doesn't seem to be out as yet. I dunno if that is one of the holdups. Then again, neither are Fay, Gustav, or Hanna, so they may be waiting on other info like wind confirmations, reanalysis data, or complete damage reports.
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74. zoomiami 2:42 AM GMT on December 16, 2008    
I'm off - take a look at the santas on my blog - some great pics posted by Pat.

Night
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75. BahaHurican 2:42 AM GMT on December 16, 2008    
Sorry to check out on u guys so early. I've been under the weather [admittedly great!] today, and I need to get out early tomorrow. So I'm heading to bed.

Goodnight, all!
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76. sugarsand 2:44 AM GMT on December 16, 2008    
Quoting conchygirl:
Hi Sugarsand: Ready for the holidays? Blog pretty quiet but as to be expected this time of the year!

I do see that Pottery is around too!

Still have a few things to do for the "holidays"...fun stuff, like baking and wrapping.
Sorry to hear about your Aunt.
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77. GatorWX 2:44 AM GMT on December 16, 2008    
nght Baha, thanks for info
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78. sugarsand 2:49 AM GMT on December 16, 2008    
Have to walk the furry kids, so g'nite!! Take care all.
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79. conchygirl 2:52 AM GMT on December 16, 2008    
Night to everyone. Work calls tomorrow.
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80. KEEPEROFTHEGATE (Mod) 5:24 AM GMT on December 16, 2008    


out of season area of intrest 25n/55w
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81. HurricaneKing 11:16 AM GMT on December 16, 2008    
Quoting KEEPEROFTHEGATE:


out of season area of intrest 25n/55w


I see a ull off to the se with a llc around 28n 55w under a developing convective blowup.
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82. HurricaneKing 11:24 AM GMT on December 16, 2008    
It's to early. I mean off to the sw.
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83. Hurricane4Lex 11:38 AM GMT on December 16, 2008    
Hi all just popped in to say 2 things:


1) Good Morning all of you WU bloggers! :)

2) anyone have the maps of the temperature outlook and precipitation outlook for the US? TIA

PS its cold again and I'm a bit sick now time to get that soup
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84. Bonedog 11:42 AM GMT on December 16, 2008    
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85. Hurricane4Lex 11:45 AM GMT on December 16, 2008    
thanks bonedog :)
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86. MissNadia 12:32 PM GMT on December 16, 2008    
Morning All
ILM is
Cloudy 54F
Forecast is for 67F with rain.
NO ICE here Bone!
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87. Bonedog 1:00 PM GMT on December 16, 2008    
LOL MissNadia

Looking at a couple of rounds of nastiness coming my way. Might be another ice storm also =( still recovering from the last one.

Hopefully all stays well for everyone.
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88. KEEPEROFTHEGATE (Mod) 1:15 PM GMT on December 16, 2008    
Member Since: July 15, 2006 Posts: 143 Comments: 40413
89. conchygirl 1:31 PM GMT on December 16, 2008    
Yikes Bonedog: You all sure don't need another ice storm. Good Morning by the way!
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90. presslord 1:32 PM GMT on December 16, 2008    
Magnitude 3.6
Date-Time Tuesday, December 16, 2008 at 12:42:15 UTC
Tuesday, December 16, 2008 at 07:42:15 AM at epicenter
Time of Earthquake in other Time Zones

Location 32.970°N, 79.997°W
Depth 5 km (3.1 miles) set by location program
Region SOUTH CAROLINA
Distances 4 km (2 miles) SE (134°) from Goose Creek, SC
6 km (4 miles) N (359°) from Hanahan, SC
10 km (6 miles) N (11°) from North Charleston, SC
146 km (90 miles) NE (45°) from Savannah, GA
418 km (260 miles) E (101°) from Atlanta, GA

Location Uncertainty horizontal +/- 23.1 km (14.4 miles); depth fixed by location program
Parameters NST= 14, Nph= 14, Dmin=22.7 km, Rmss=1.11 sec, Gp=234°,
M-type="Nuttli" surface wave magnitude (MLg), Version=6
Source USGS NEIC
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92. NEwxguy 2:05 PM GMT on December 16, 2008    
Hey,Bone,are you ready to rock and roll this week?All your snowcasting looks like its going to pay off
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94. Rainman32 2:22 PM GMT on December 16, 2008    
90.

Hmmm.. took a look at the location map, the epicenter is across the street from Charleston Naval Weapons Sta.. blame it on the neighbors?

more: Magnitude 3.6 - SOUTH CAROLINA

Mod: Oh, isn't that interesting? they changed the location.. where the heck is my tinfoil hat?

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96. presslord 2:29 PM GMT on December 16, 2008    
yea rain....maybe something went "Boom!"
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97. AussieStorm 2:30 PM GMT on December 16, 2008    
Quoting HadesGodWyvern:
as for how many cyclone for the southern hemisphere I seen about 10 for Australia and 10 for Fiji region.. so it might be an active season down south.

There is also a cyclone potential for Australia right now (Western Australia region)

What about Queensland and Northern Territory, that's the north and east coast of tropical Australia. I will endevour to bring everyone the latest info when the s@#t hits the fan here in OZ.
Cheers and Happy Festive Season, God Bless, and a Happy New Year to one and all.
AussieStorm
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98. presslord 2:31 PM GMT on December 16, 2008    
vort....that's SJ's neck of the woods...too many Krystals again....
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99. MissNadia 2:33 PM GMT on December 16, 2008    
Local News is reporting an outbreak of the Norovirus at an assisted living Facility here in Wilmington.
This is not good news!
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100. Bonedog 2:44 PM GMT on December 16, 2008    
Back. Trying to get overstretched plumbers out to my house before this malstrom happens.

Yea NE appears that all my wishing is paying off =) But I dont like the ice wording in the forecast.

Morning conchy =) Yes folks up this way dont need another round of ice, snow yes. Still have a ton of branches and two trees left to clear from the property, get the boiler back online finally (hopefully today), and work crews are still removing branches from wires and fixing infastructure.

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101. Cotillion 3:16 PM GMT on December 16, 2008    
Quoting Rainman32:
90.

Hmmm.. took a look at the location map, the epicenter is across the street from Charleston Naval Weapons Sta.. blame it on the neighbors?

more: Magnitude 3.6 - SOUTH CAROLINA

Mod: Oh, isn't that interesting? they changed the location.. where the heck is my tinfoil hat?




I used it to grill sausages.

Sorry. :(
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About JeffMasters
Jeff co-founded the Weather Underground in 1995 while working on his Ph.D. He flew with the NOAA Hurricane Hunters from 1986-1990.

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