Roadrunner wrote:
Well due to GW, we do not get those -30's much anymore, but it will get down to -20°. What we have though is the windchill factor. I spent 32 years working in shipyards and one time I did a 12-hr shift in a -55° windchill, in the bottom of a drydock. The coldest windchill I've experienced was back thirty years or so ago, ~-70°. On the brighter side, below -40° the human body does not recognize the change. Gee, that was a relief to learn that!
That is cold. I couldn't imagine that cold. I guess it's a guess that's a good thing that a human body does not recognize the change.
Tad1937... Were you living in Daytona when it snowed Christmas eve 1989?
It is 83 here right now...kind of cool for a change.