Mt Washington New Hampshire -231 mph record wind in 1934

Posted By on April 12, 2016

Did you know that "on this day" in 1934 in aWeatherStationMtWashington small weather station (chained to the ground) atop of Mt. Washington in New Hampshire measured record setting winds speeds of 231 mph? Wow!

That record held until Cyclone Olivia was recorded at 253 mph wind gusts on Barrow Island in Australia in 1996. I’m not sure how one survives in that kind of wind … but even more shockingly is  the wind speeds "exceed 100 mph on one of every three days" during  winter on Mt. Washington; it is known as "Home of the World’s Worst Weather."

MtWashingtonWindsm

The mountain sits at the convergence of three storm tracks from the Atlantic Ocean to the south, the southwest and the northwest. Westerly winds accelerate as they race up the mountainside.  And low pressure systems develop along the warmer ocean in winter and collide with the colder Northeast air, causing storms to develop.

Mt._Washington_chained_building

Because of its severe weather, Mt. Washington is known as ‘the most dangerous small mountain in the world.’ On that April day in 1934, it was indeed dangerous for the five men hunkered down in the observatory.

The 2-year-old observatory was staffed by Salvatore Pagliuca, Alex McKenzie and Wendell Stephenson. They had two guests, Arthur Griffin and George Leslie. The small building was chained to the ground.

When the men went to bed on the night of April 11, pressure was falling and winds were increasing rapidly to 136 mph. By the next morning it was obvious they were in the middle of a super-hurricane. Stephenson checked the instrument that recorded the wind speed and saw it was wrong. That meant the anemometer was iced over.

Stephenson suited up, grabbed a club and opened the door. The wind knocked him down. With the wind at his back, he climbed the ladder, clubbed the anemometer dozens of times and cleared the ice — an incredibly difficult and dangerous task. Then he went back into the station and checked the recorder. It showed a windspeed of 150 mph.

The men recorded frequent values of 220 mph, with occasional gusts of 229 mph. Then, at 1:21 pm on April 12, 1934, the extreme value of 231 mph out of the southeast was recorded.

To experience a similar wind, wrote one observer, you’d have to poke your head out of a 747 on takeoff.

The record held until 2010, when a review of climate data turned up a 253 mph gust on Barrow Island in Australia during Cyclone Olivia in 1996.

Link from New England Historical Society

Who knows what emoji you are really sending and receiving?

Posted By on April 12, 2016

Ever notice that the emoji you send from one device to another isn’t always translated the same? Well that because each platform has their own unique way of translating that "grinning or grimacing face" that we once-upon-a-time type as punctuation marks and called emoticons.

sameemojis

A study by the GroupLens Research team at the University of Minnesota examines the variations between some popular emoji presentations and how they are perceived. The most widely misinterpreted is the “grinning face with smiling eyes” emoji, which—depending on the platform—can range from the rosy-cheeked cherubic face of glee to the anguished clenched-teeth look of constipation.

Gizmodo article

Raspberry Pi security video and nearing the end for the Rav4

Posted By on April 12, 2016

We found out a couple things Monday … first, the Raspberry Pi garage camera seems to be working just fine after tweaking a few thing while experimenting in the house, albeit the video is a bit delayed (15 seconds maybe ???). So far so good with video … next to get some motion detection so as not to broadcast continually.

RasberryPiCam160411

Second, Brenda’s 1998 Toyota Rav4 has seen better days. We’ve pretty much stretch the life out of this little petite 4×4 and it has given us good service for 18 years and 265,000 miles. Since our “fleet” (as my son-in-law calls it) has grown to too many vehicles, we decided it was time to thin the herd. My friend Tim has a daughter nearly ready to drive and both of us thought it would make a perfect first car. He came over and took it to a trusted mechanic and unfortunately “car cancer” known as “rust” has eaten away in a few critical areas of the frame. The body is fine, but the undercarriage must not have received the same corrosion prevention? Unfortunately the car is just not safe for a young driver (or probably old?) and it would need some reinforcement … something that is realistically cost prohibitive. So … next step is to sell it for parts or as a salvage vehicle. Are you trying to keep an older Rav4 running?

Rav4 rust

Who is reading what — the top blog posts from the past decade

Posted By on April 11, 2016

While cleaning up the MyDesultoryBlog.com WordPress install in preparation for an eventually PHP 7.0 update, I decided it was time to see just what posts were getting the most eyeballs. TopPost2015For years, the top post was the Great White Shark following a kayak … and rightly so. After a few years and a popular Accelerated Medical School Program post, top spot fell to the Rogue wave/Cruise ship photo shortly after we experienced 94KT wind gusts on a Mediterranean cruise vacation. A surprise Boat shoe inserts/insoles post and the following Topsiders series eventually surpassed the previous posts. Finally they gave way to Jacob Tolliver pounds the piano in an Ohio hardware store and finally a surprise how to post on the Honda Odyssey power sliding doorwho knew?  

Unfortunately the only one in the top 10 from last year (2015) was  an archived Paul Harvey audio clip from 1965.

  Paul Harvey This was his warning in 1965

Testing my old Raspberry Pi as a home security camera

Posted By on April 10, 2016

It is pretty easy for me to get distracted when I’m suppose to be working on taxes … especially when my Raspberry Pi2 has given RPi2_securecamtest160407up webserver duties to the Raspberry Pi3. There were a couple glitches in imaging the new 64GB micro SD card but all is as it should be now.

With the new home micro server keeping American Pi up and running as s test server, the previous Pi2 was moved to our music room and connected to our home audio. I love it for running Pianobar and playing one of the many personalized Pandora stations commercial free throughout the house. As an aside, I taped the tiny $12 camera to the side of the case it so it could save either a video stream or send a security image (above) via a private Twitter feed with notification to my normal RichC account. So far so good, but probably not the best for home security. Perhaps a motion detector project is in my future … or maybe moving it to the front porch as a doorbell camera?

YOURLS on a webserver for personalized shortened URLs

Posted By on April 9, 2016

yourlsinstall160408

A little more tinkering with webservers and websites this weekend lead me to adding open source YOURLS project to my little used richc.us domain (it was just place holder for a server). Its use gives me a simplified bit.ly or goo.gl "like" personalized URL shortener. Initially I thought about opening it for public use, but after hearing horror stories, thought twice about opening it up. Currently it is a way to send shorter Tweets and track the popularity of clicks especially with browser "bookmarklets" … interesting but probably not really all that exciting.

Updated to PHP 7.0 on the Raspberry Pi 3

Posted By on April 8, 2016

American Pi (richcorbett.us) is up and running PHP 7.0 on this Raspberry Pi 3. So far no issues with the Iconic One WordPress theme, handful of plugins or the speeds on this Apache2 server (is it faster?)

Click to check PHP Version

TechFriday: A digital thermometer is a must have gadget

Posted By on April 8, 2016

On our last trip out sailing on Encore I noticed the Volvo was running hotter than it should be. IMG_1677My first thought was a lack of cooling water flowing in through the new smaller strainer, but then it was possible the coolant was low — I added about a quart. After returning home I also wondered if the temperature gauge was reading correction and decided that next trip down to check a few things.

Enter the digital thermometer. I’ve never had one of these gadgets and now that I do, can’t believe it has taken me so long to buy one. I picked up a "well made" rubberized refurbished cheapy for $12 (including free Prime shipping) on Amazon and can’t believe just how super is it. The range is from -30C to +360C and it has a soft switch for either C or F degrees. There is also a backlight (on or off) and a surrounding air temperature or laser option. Amazingly simple to use and nearly instant reading … with a hold feature as soon as the trigger is released. If you do not have one of these, get one!

Now to see if it can help me diagnose why the auxiliary diesel on the boat is overheating.

digitalthermo

Talking taxes, politics and old #TBT high school reunion pages

Posted By on April 7, 2016

Taylor160405Here’s a personal "what I’m doing" post after spending an evening with my son Taylor finishing up his taxes. We of course used this excuse to have dinner together too. I think we have both always enjoyed our time together, but the older (and more mature) he gets, the more I really do enjoy talking with him … including the usual, politics. Hopefully now that he’s paying a few more taxes, he’ll want to hold all politicians more accountable for their irresponsible spending habits (and I’m not even talking about President Obama’s getaways!).

I also realized it will be Thursday when this post goes live … so I might as well include a couple ThrowBackThursday #TBT images my brother and I found while sorting through my mom and dad’s house in preparation to sell. The pages below are from my mother’s collection of high school reunion pages … the amazing part is that this summer will be my wife’s 40th reunion! It doesn’t seem possible? A couple of the notes shared in mom’s 40th Libbey High School reunion from the class of 1952 was that she had 4 grandchildren and that my dad was retiring! First, I’m not sure we’re even old enough to have grandchildren … and second, is retirement even in our future?

LibbeyHighSchoolReunionBooks JAB_ReunionClass1952in1992

The Raspberry Pi 3 is up and running with a LAMP stack

Posted By on April 6, 2016

BroadComChip

After buying a new 64GB Samsung EVO+ microSD card and imaging Raspian on it, I started the Raspberry Pi 3 in my home office.  It is now time to start installing software and updating it to make it a proper "micro" webserver … although I already have WordPress and American Pi running on it (even installed PHP7 against my better judgement!). There is still a lot of tweaking still to do, but it is running the LAMP stack pretty well and as a couple favorite apps … like Pianobar (love that Pandora app).  I am amazed how much hotter the Broadcom chip runs when compared to the Pi2 … it even hit 80 degrees C for a few minutes during an install although averages about 60 degrees C (Pi 2 is  in the 40s even when overclocked). I’m starting to think about a little cooling heatsink if I want this microcomputer to remain stable and last a while?

I’ve tried using it a little bit as a desktop Linux computer … and although it is faster than than the Raspberry Pi 2, it is still a sloth.

evo64gbsdcard

Desultory - des-uhl-tawr-ee, -tohr-ee

  1. lacking in consistency, constancy, or visible order, disconnected; fitful: desultory conversation.
  2. digressing from or unconnected with the main subject; random: a desultory remark.
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