Radar on a cell phone
yeah, right. at 165 nm way an 10 knots speed it will only take 16-1/2 hours
for a thunderstorm to get to you. FAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAR too quickly
for you react. You really should buy a cell phone to tell you that a storm is
on its way and may hit you sometime tomorrown afternoon.
Gosh, maybe I need new glasses - when I'm in the Bay off Annapolis, I
just can't see those clouds over Morgantown, West Virginia - a mere
165 nm away.
In fact, from the top of Old Rag mountain at over 3200 feet, most days
I can't make out Washington, D.C. a mere 70 miles away (needless to
say, I don't do this in a sailboat).
Maybe I need Lasik!
Eric
(JAXAshby) wrote in message
...
There are lots of places where people sail and it's difficult to see a
thunderstorm coming
bull****. Thunderstorm clouds go as high as 60,000 feet sometimes, which
means
they can be seen up to 300 nm away. Even 10,000 foot high clouds can be
seen
up to 122 nm away. Can't see that coming?
And there are many places where the potential
exists every day in the summer
thunderstorms don't form inside of 30 seconds. You *KNOW* they are coming,
if
one just pays attention.
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