Thread: Heavy Air
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Scott Vernon
 
Posts: n/a
Default Heavy Air

That would be when there are two low tides in a day, the lower one being
''Lower Low''.

???????



"Jeff Morris" jeffmo@NoSpam-sv-lokiDOTcom wrote in message
...
Very Good.

Another quiz: What's the meaning of "Lower Low"?


"Scott Vernon" wrote in message
...
According to Chapman;

MLW: the avg. height of all low waters at a place over a 19-year cycle.


MLLW: the avg. height of the lower low waters over a 19-year cycle.

SV


"Jeff Morris" jeffmo@NoSpam-sv-lokiDOTcom wrote in message
...
No - LAT is "Lowest Astronomical Tide" or the lowest tide that would

be
predicted. LLWLT,
or "Lower Low Water Large Tide" is the average of the lowest low water

for
each year in a
19 year cycle.

Presumably, LAT would be the lowest of the lowest low water in the 19

year
cycle, not the
average.



"The_navigator©" wrote in message
...
Here (and the UK I believe) it is the "lowest astromical tide". If

you
think about it, that is the only sensible datum for a _sounding_!

Cheers MC

Jeff Morris wrote:

If you were going to take the time to look it up, you could have

at
least said how it
is
defined.


"Donal" wrote in message
...

"Jeff Morris" jeffmo@NoSpam-sv-lokiDOTcom wrote in message
...

How old is that chart? All of my US charts from the recent past

use
MLLW

as the datum for

soundings. I even checked in my Chesapeake ChartKit to see if

they
were

different.

OK - Here's a quiz: What's the meaning of LLWLT?

Lower Low Water Large Tide.


Sounds similiar to LAT.


Regards


Donal
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