Dragon Star wrote:Yea? About 68F today, 74 here tomorrow...
*ducks and runs*
Lance wrote:Dragon Star wrote:Yea? About 68F today, 74 here tomorrow...
*ducks and runs*
Bite me.
hippietrekx wrote:Lance wrote:Dragon Star wrote:Yea? About 68F today, 74 here tomorrow...
*ducks and runs*
Bite me.
I second that motion.
Dragon Star wrote:hippietrekx wrote:Lance wrote:Dragon Star wrote:Yea? About 68F today, 74 here tomorrow...
*ducks and runs*
Bite me.
I second that motion.
Sure? It's likely not going to be as kinky as it was the first time...
hippietrekx wrote:Dragon Star wrote:hippietrekx wrote:Lance wrote:Dragon Star wrote:Yea? About 68F today, 74 here tomorrow...
*ducks and runs*
Bite me.
I second that motion.
Sure? It's likely not going to be as kinky as it was the first time...
I hope you get heat stroke.
Heid the Ba' wrote:This thread made no sense to me until I realised you were taking about positive fahrenheit values. In the UK we have the odd habit of using Fahrenheit for hot temperatures (eg 85 degrees today) and Celsius for cold (eg just below freezing is -2). It doesn't make sense but almost eveyone does it.
umop ap!sdn wrote:hippietrekx wrote:In leiu of the little ninja smilie?
Or even in addition to it.
Khrushchev's Other Shoe wrote:That is a rather odd habit :P
But, this is a Fahrenheit board. I posted a Celsius tempature of 30 or so once, and people thought I was complaining about how cold it was. . .
Heid the Ba' wrote:30 degrees would make no sense to most people here, in either scale. It would either be 86 or -2. I was discussing this at the weekend and the consensus seems to be a changeover at about 10 Celsius. Below that is C, above that F; so you leap from single digit C to 50 something F.
Offhand I can't recall the conversion formula but work with 0=32, 16=61 and 28=82. If I had any mathematical ability I ought to be able to work out the formula but can't.
Khrushchev's Other Shoe wrote:The first is exact, the other two are approximate. You left out the best example, which one may work out using Lance's formulae, which is -40 degrees.
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