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Windy Willow
25 July 2019 21:41:24

Timelapse of a historic day, maximum approaching 34C. Even a very loud crash of thunder mid-afternoon
Originally Posted by: KevBrads1 

">http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nJE_RwaXTDs


That's a great timelapse recording! 


South Holland, Lincs 5m/16ft ASL

Don't feed the Trolls!! When starved of attention they return to their dark caves or the dark recesses of bridges and will turn back to stone, silent again!
RobR
  • RobR
  • Advanced Member
25 July 2019 21:51:17
An extradionary day, can't believe we didn't get the record. That said this heat was better for the rest of the UK it seems so good we all got involved.

I drove down the M6 with my windows down enjoying the hairdryer air this afternoon 😅
Winter 23/24 in Nantwich
Days Snow Falling: 4
Days Snow Lying: 1
Deepest Snowfall: 3rd December 23 (2cm)



Winter 22/23 in Nantwich

Days Snow Falling: 4
Days Snow Lying: 2
Deepest Snowfall: 10th March (3cm)
Latest Snowfall: 10th March

Winter 21/22 in Nantwich

Days Snow Falling: 3
Days Snow Lying: 1
Deepest Snowfall: 28th November (3cm)
Latest Snowfall: 31st March

Winter 20/21 in Solihull

Days Snow Falling: 21
Days Snow Lying: 8
Deepest Snowfall: 24th January (9cm)
Latest Snowfall: 12th April

Winter 19/20 in Stoke

Days Snow Falling: 5
Days Snow Lying: 2
Deepest Snowfall: 10th Feb (5cm)

Winter 18/19 in Stoke

Days Snow Falling: 6
Days Snow Lying: 6
Deepest Snowfall: 29th Jan (3cm)

Winter 17/18 in Stoke

Days Snow Falling: 27
Days Snow Lying: 24
Deepest Snowfall: 18th March 2018 (10cm)
Rob K
25 July 2019 21:51:45


Meanwhile on the Continent, records tumble


Paris 42.6C (highest ever for Paris itself)


and national records, provisional at this stage


Germany (Lingen) 41.5C


Belgium (Kleine Breughel - spelling dubious, this was on BBC news audio) 40.6C


Netherlands (Gilze an Rijen) 40.4C


https://www.wunderground.com/cat6/All-Time-Heat-Records-Melt-Europe-Worst-Come-Thursday?cm_ven=cat6-widget


 


Originally Posted by: DEW 


The Belgian one is called Kleine Brogel. 


 


Meanwhile in the UK there are still six stations at or above 28C at 10pm tonight. 


Yateley, NE Hampshire, 73m asl
"But who wants to be foretold the weather? It is bad enough when it comes, without our having the misery of knowing about it beforehand." — Jerome K. Jerome
superteacher
25 July 2019 22:01:39


 


We might although it won’t be easy.


Heathrow and Nottingham both at 28.0C at 2200. The Donna Nook reading is erroneous.


Originally Posted by: Global Warming 


Re the 23.9C min in August 1990 - what were the synoptics that allowed it to happen? Yes, it was in the middle of a heatwave, but specifically?

Joe Bloggs
25 July 2019 22:03:22


 


Only the info on Wikipedia but not sure on it's accuracy as the references don't seem to work for Manchester.


Getting weather data is hard work. The Met Office website should have far more information available.


Did there used to be a Manchester weather centre ?


 


EDIT the best I can do is:  try Weatheronline and the history section , records for Manchester go way back, but you have to read off the graph.  I assume August 3rd 1990 was the highest temp at Manchester Airport at 34.x


Originally Posted by: Tim A 


Yes Manchester did used to have a weather centre, situated in Stockport town centre. Obviously long gone now. 


I have to be honest, for this part of the country, there seems to be a distinct lack of easy to reach, historical weather data. Woodford (situated in the borough of Stockport) is fairly representative of the city but a known frost hollow and is no longer in use. 


Rostherne is a brand new station so has no historical records and is too far out of the city to be representative. Manchester Airport is still in use, but is not an official Met Office station as far as I know? Data is available but isn’t especially easy to decipher. Manchester Uni isn’t accurate enough. 


Overall it has been a fascinating and exceptional day. The heat in the city has been absolutely incredible - there are a few unofficial stations within the UHI of Manchester which have recorded 34 or 35C today and I can well believe they are accurate. 


Incredible and not to be forgotten for a long time. 



Manchester City Centre, 31m ASL

Whether Idle
25 July 2019 22:09:17


Brogdale will apparently be checked tomorrow morning. 


Originally Posted by: Brian Gaze 


Excellent. 


Dover, 5m asl. Half a mile from the south coast.
Joe Bloggs
25 July 2019 22:09:55

Right now the temp has dropped to 21C, but with a dewpoint of 20C it feels unbearably humid. 



Manchester City Centre, 31m ASL

snow 2004
25 July 2019 22:13:47


Right now the temp has dropped to 21C, but with a dewpoint of 20C it feels unbearably humid. 


Originally Posted by: Joe Bloggs 


 


Still 25.7C here and that's after a few spots of rain just then!


Glossop Derbyshire, 200m asl
Tom Rance
25 July 2019 22:19:16
My local site in Cambridgeshire, Little Paxton had a max of 38.6 today which is in a correctly exposed screen over grass. Ties in with the Cambridge reading?
Tom
Cambridgeshire, Ouse Valley, 40ft AMSL.
Bolty
25 July 2019 22:25:52
My time-lapse from Manchester:


Scott
Blackrod, Lancashire (4 miles south of Chorley) at 156m asl.
My weather station 
Rob K
25 July 2019 22:27:03
Holbeach 27.7C at 11pm. Heathrow 27.3C. A relatively cool 23C here in Hampshire.
Yateley, NE Hampshire, 73m asl
"But who wants to be foretold the weather? It is bad enough when it comes, without our having the misery of knowing about it beforehand." — Jerome K. Jerome
Weathermac
25 July 2019 22:39:08
Still 26.2c here in Bedworth and much warmer indoors .
tallyho_83
25 July 2019 22:58:41
12AM here in London and it's still 26c in central London
1AM in Paris and it's 32c


CRAZY!!
Home Location - Kellands Lane, Okehampton, Devon (200m ASL)
---------------------------------------
Sean Moon
Magical Moon
www.magical-moon.com


picturesareme
25 July 2019 23:13:34
23C here at 12:10am so nothing extraordinary.
John p
25 July 2019 23:23:43


 


We might although it won’t be easy.


Heathrow and Nottingham both at 28.0C at 2200. The Donna Nook reading is erroneous.


Originally Posted by: Global Warming 


Donna Nook was not an error and is in fact absolutely fascinating...


https://twitter.com/metoffice/status/1154527667980402688?s=20


Camberley, Surrey
Bolty
25 July 2019 23:32:04


 


Donna Nook was not an error and is in fact absolutely fascinating...


https://twitter.com/metoffice/status/1154527667980402688?s=20


Originally Posted by: John p 


Yes was just reading that tweet. Apparently it's a phenomenon known as a "heat burst".


https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Heat_burst


Scott
Blackrod, Lancashire (4 miles south of Chorley) at 156m asl.
My weather station 
johncs2016
25 July 2019 23:40:16

The BBC have reported yesterday's highest temperature in Edinburgh (which is officially our highest ever recorded temperature for here in Edinburgh) to have been 31.6°C without identifying which actual station this was recorded at.

A local newspaper has quoted the same temperature for yesterday here in Edinburgh, and has pointed out Edinburgh Gogarbank as the station where that reading was recorded. This report even goes on to say that this was later confirmed by the Met Office.

Yet, the data from www.weathercast.co.uk shows yesterday's maximum temperature at Edinburgh Gogarbank to have been 30.9°C (which is what I have therefore, reported on the last CC thread on this forum as yesterday's maximum) and this is also backed up by the Met Office Observations website.

A tweet on the BBC Scotland Weather Twitter account even reported at 3pm (when that reading was recorded) that the highest recorded temperature in Edinburgh was 30.9°C as per that maximum value at Edinburgh Gogarbank which I reported on this forum.

That in turn, leads me to wonder where that other figure of 31.6°C came from which was later confirmed as the actual record. Now, data at both www.weathercast.co.uk and the Met Office Observations website is only ever reported on the hour, every hour and it is out of that data where that maximum value of 30.9°C comes from.

If the actual official record is 31.6°C though, this means that yesterday's maximum temperature at Edinburgh Gogarbank must have actually been 31.6°C, and not the value of 30.9°C which is highest hourly value for that station during yesterday.

There is a difference of 0.7°C between those two values, so that higher value which has been reported as the official record must have come about from some sort of upwards adjustment, or from other data which is produced from that station in between those hourly readings, but which is never actually publicly released.

Furthermore, this higher temperature must have occurred at some time after 3pm, as that lower value of 30.9°C would probably have been the actual highest temperature of the day so far at the time of that above mentioned tweet.


 


The north of Edinburgh, usually always missing out on snow events which occur not just within the rest of Scotland or the UK, but also within the rest of Edinburgh.
Hungry Tiger
25 July 2019 23:46:46

Should think the 24 hours CET record is well and truly up for grabs.


It's still 25C here.


 


Gavin S. FRmetS.
TWO Moderator.
Contact the TWO team - [email protected]
South Cambridgeshire. 93 metres or 302.25 feet ASL.


Rob K
25 July 2019 23:49:31

Just edited my list of 35C+ maxima to include Wellesbourne 36.2C and Sheffield 35.6C, from Met Office data.


Yateley, NE Hampshire, 73m asl
"But who wants to be foretold the weather? It is bad enough when it comes, without our having the misery of knowing about it beforehand." — Jerome K. Jerome
Rob K
25 July 2019 23:52:06


The BBC have reported yesterday's highest temperature in Edinburgh (which is officially our highest ever recorded temperature for here in Edinburgh) to have been 31.6°C without identifying which actual station this was recorded at.

A local newspaper has quoted the same temperature for yesterday here in Edinburgh, and has pointed out Edinburgh Gogarbank as the station where that reading was recorded. This report even goes on to say that this was later confirmed by the Met Office. 


Originally Posted by: johncs2016 


It's quite straightforward, 30.9C was the highest hourly reading but the actual max, which of course is unlikely to fall precisely on an hourly reading, was 31.6C. The Met Office "last 24 hours" obs page confirms that the 31.6C was Gogarbank. https://www.metoffice.gov.uk/public/weather/observation/map/gcvwr3zrw#?zoom=6&lat=54.69&lon=-4.00&map=WeatherCode&fcTime=1564052400


 


The daily max is usually only publicly released with the 6pm (UTC, ie 7pm in summer) SYNOP reading, which as well as the 6pm temperature also includes the daily maximum (and similarly the 6am SYNOP includes the overnight minimum). Hence why 30.9C would have been reported until the true max was known after 7pm.


 


Yateley, NE Hampshire, 73m asl
"But who wants to be foretold the weather? It is bad enough when it comes, without our having the misery of knowing about it beforehand." — Jerome K. Jerome
Rob K
26 July 2019 00:01:47


 


Donna Nook was not an error and is in fact absolutely fascinating...


https://twitter.com/metoffice/status/1154527667980402688?s=20


Originally Posted by: John p 


And the heat burst gave the highest temp of the day by more than 6 degrees! The 6am-6pm max was 26.1C.


 



 



Yateley, NE Hampshire, 73m asl
"But who wants to be foretold the weather? It is bad enough when it comes, without our having the misery of knowing about it beforehand." — Jerome K. Jerome
johncs2016
26 July 2019 00:07:47


 


It's quite straightforward, 30.9C was the highest hourly reading but the actual max, which of course is unlikely to fall precisely on an hourly reading, was 31.6C. The Met Office "last 24 hours" obs page confirms that the 31.6C was Gogarbank. https://www.metoffice.gov.uk/public/weather/observation/map/gcvwr3zrw#?zoom=6&lat=54.69&lon=-4.00&map=WeatherCode&fcTime=1564052400


 


The daily max is usually only publicly released with the 6pm (UTC, ie 7pm in summer) SYNOP reading, which as well as the 6pm temperature also includes the daily maximum (and similarly the 6am SYNOP includes the overnight minimum). Hence why 30.9C would have been reported until the true max was known after 7pm.


 


Originally Posted by: Rob K 


Thanks for that, as I wouldn't have thought about checking the last 24 hours page on the Met Office site after 7pm to find out what the true maximum temperature actually was before reporting that on the daily CC threads (which would therefore, be the more accurate way of doing that).


Nevertheless, that is something to remember for the future as this will also apply to whatever I report for the botanic gardens in Edinburgh as well.


 


The north of Edinburgh, usually always missing out on snow events which occur not just within the rest of Scotland or the UK, but also within the rest of Edinburgh.
Gavin P
26 July 2019 00:30:46

Reached 37C (99F) here in rural W. Northants making it the hottest day here since 3rd August 1990  


Still 21C and not a breath of wind (hence why I'm still awake and posting on here at 1:30am haha) 


Rural West Northants 120m asl
Short, medium and long range weather forecast videos @ https://www.youtube.com/user/GavsWeatherVids
johncs2016
26 July 2019 00:56:44


Reached 37C (99F) here in rural W. Northants making it the hottest day here since 3rd August 1990  


Still 21C and not a breath of wind (hence why I'm still awake and posting on here at 1:30am haha) 


Originally Posted by: Gavin P 


Since you do storm watch, snow watch and rain watch videos, I am wondering whether or not it might be a good idea to add heat watch videos that list in this sort of scenario.


In this case, it might even have been good if such a heat watch video had been produced along with your last storm watch video as one single video combining those two elements.


That is particularly true since this is an instance where the heat watch part of that came off really well (the fact that Edinburgh had its hottest day on record is itself, evidence of that) whereas the storm watch part of this has been a virtual non-event here (the latest radar map shows that there is not a single thunderstorm to be seen anywhere in Scotland as I write, with virtually the entire country being completely dry despite the fact that we are still under an official Met Office yellow warning for those thunderstorms).


 


The north of Edinburgh, usually always missing out on snow events which occur not just within the rest of Scotland or the UK, but also within the rest of Edinburgh.
Tim A
26 July 2019 03:08:37


Just edited my list of 35C+ maxima to include Wellesbourne 36.2C and Sheffield 35.6C, from Met Office data.


Originally Posted by: Rob K 


Sheffield at 35.6c is possibly  the joint Yorkshire and Northern record, tied with Bawtry at 35.6c in September 1906.  


That Donna Nook reading is incredible, I saw it last night and assumed error.  People must have been confused, one minute it was 22c with a nice sea breeze then it rises to a tropical 32c. 


Would be nice to know which stations broke their all time records.  Round here Bingley,  Bradford and Sheffield too. Perhaps Linton on ooze and Ryhill also. 


Tim
NW Leeds
187m asl

 My PWS 

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