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John Deere Tractors Discussion Board

Re: Hey F-I-T...


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Posted by F-I-T on July 19, 2004 at 18:12:55 from (137.78.94.249):

In Reply to: Hey F-I-T... posted by G-MAN on July 19, 2004 at 16:22:54:

G-Man:

Actually, where I am today there are wild fires nearby (LA County).

Now I'm all for the fun of it, but.....understand, you're cherry picking a few days out of a year to compare to. There are times that even Alaska is warmer than Tallahassee, but maybe only for part of an afternoon.

Go back two weekends and take a look. We were 95+* and the heat index was expected to be 108, and I think it was warmer than that a month ago. I added a link to the story.

Here are some statistics from Weatherbase.com:

AveragRelativce Humidity:

Nebraska = 67.25%

Tallahassee = 72.25%

Average Temperature

Nebraska = 51*

Tallahassee = 87

Days above 90* for the year:

Nebraska = 39

Tallahassee = 87

I'm still not budging: "North Florida on average is both more humid and warmer than Nebraska".

Remember back to the discussion. It was about black algae in diesel fuel. My concern was that you said you had seen only a couple cases of it in Nebraska, and to the uninitiated, they might think, "Well, that means it's rare anywhere".

I just didn't want people to think from your comments that because you only saw two instances of fuel tank algae in Nebraska that it wasn't a significant problem elsewhere. It's a real concern down here were it's warm all the time. As I said, in areas where the average temperature and humidity is high, like Florida, Georgia, etc, the occurence of fuel tank algae is real and widespread.

If you figure out how to swap weather from region to region, you'll be too wealthy to talk to.

Frank




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