Misguided thinking: All time low temperature record for Illinois called into question by NWS citing lack of confidence in equipment. "ASOS better than AWOS"

http://www3.verticalgateway.com/portals/12/rotornews/aug%2008/awos.jpg

ASOS (left) AWOS (right) – both at airports click for larger images

People send me stuff. Last night I got an email from reader Andrew Schut that said:

See public information statement below.  I’m perplexed.

ASOS was put in for “aviation purposes” given its tolerances, yet we use it for climate purposes, why should AWOS be any different?

Not to mention the sensor that AWOS uses is a Vaisala sensor and at least a decade ahead in terms of sensor technology compared to the prehistoric 1088 RTD thermistor that the NWS has been using since the mid 80’s.

What Andrew was referring to was this unusual public information statement from the National Weather Service in Chicago, nullifying an apparently new low statewide temperature record from Rochelle Illinois:

PUBLIC INFORMATION STATEMENT

NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE CHICAGO IL

432 PM CST FRI JAN 16 2009

…REGARDING ROCHELLE`S LOW TEMPERATURE THIS MORNING…

THE AUTOMATED WEATHER OBSERVING SYSTEM (AWOS) AT THE ROCHELLE

AIRPORT RECORDED A TEMPERATURE OF -36F AT 745 AM THIS MORNING.

WHILE THE THERMOMETER ON THE AWOS WAS RE-CALIBRATED YESTERDAY

AND MAY INDEED BE ACCURATE…AWOS OBSERVATIONS ARE NOT QUALITY

CONTROLLED OR CALIBRATED BY THE NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE AND

ARE ALSO NOT DESIGNED FOR CLIMATE PURPOSES.

THEREFORE…THE STATE CLIMATOLOGIST DOES NOT CONSIDER THIS

TEMPERATURE AN OFFICIAL MEASUREMENT FOR THE PURPOSE OF

DETERMINING WHETHER OR NOT AN ALL TIME RECORD LOW FOR THE

STATE WAS REACHED. FOR THE PURPOSE OF DETERMINING RECORD

TEMPERATURES FOR THE STATE…ONLY ASOS AND

COOPERATIVE OBSERVER OBSERVATIONS WILL BE USED SINCE BOTH OF

THESE OBSERVATIONS ARE QUALITY CONTROLLED BY THE

NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE.

See the original here. Personally, I don’t think airports are a suitable place for ANY climate measurements to be made. Here is why.

Airports are dynamic environments, with changes in air traffic, runway upgrades, new runways, new terminals, more tarmac/access roads, and increased infrastructure in general over time. For the NWS in Chicago to say that one ASOS at one airport is somehow better that an AWOS at another, particularly one calibrated the day before, is simply disingenuous. Throw them both out I say. Airports aren’t “quality controlled” for station siting changes. The claim that ASOS is somehow thus better than AWOS is simply ludicrous. There is no basis for this claim.

Let’s look at some examples of ASOS climate stations and the type of quality control that goes on:

First the issue of encroachment by infrastructure, here’s a new fire station going up next to an ASOS station (which is a USHCN climate station) in Lafayette, LA, I believe the station to the lower right is an older AWOS station:

Click for a larger interactive image

Of course it didn’t always used to be this way, the Google Earth image, which is a bit older, shows the area before the construction started:

Click for a larger interactive image

A call to the LFT airport authority at this contact from their website told me that the contract for the new fire station facility was awarded in July of 2005 and that construction started shortly after that. The new fire station, show being constructed in the top photo is now complete.

Reader Davis Smith writes:

Fifteen miles north of the Lafayette airport is another temperature site named Grand Coteau. It seems reasonable to expect the two to have similar trends (using GISS adjusted data) due to their proximity. A comparison of the two for recent years is here :

Click for larger image

Looks like a divergence circa 2004.

Ok that’s just one example. How about then the issues with the ASOS station in Reno, NV, that the NWS had to move because they didn’t agree with the readings it gave? NOAA uses Reno’s placement problems as an example in a training manual for climate monitoring COOP managers.

See NOAA Professional Competency Unit 6

What was amazing is that the NWS determined that there were significant problems with this USHCN ASOS station placement at the Reno Airport  that contributed a significant warming bias to the record.

From that manual:

Reno’s busy urban airport has seen the growth of an urban heat bubble on its north end.

The corresponding graph of mean annual minimum temperature (average of 365 nighttime

minimums each year) has as a consequence been steadily rising. When the new

ASOS sensor was installed, the site was moved to the much cooler south end of the

runway. Nearby records indicate that the two cool post-ASOS years should have been

warmer rather than cooler. When air traffic controllers asked for a location not so close

to nearby trees (for better wind readings), the station was moved back. The first move

was documented, the second was not. The climate record shows both the steady warming

of the site, as well as the big difference in overnight temperature between one end of this

flat and seemingly homogeneous setting, an observation borne out by automobile

traverses around the airport at night.

They were also kind enough to provide a photo essay of their own as well as a graph. You can click the aerial photo to get a Google Earth interactive view of the area.

reno-nv-asos-relocation.jpg

This is NOAA’s graph showing the changes to the official climate record when they made station moves:

reno-nv-asos-station-moves-plot.png

Here is what a surface temperature transect of Reno looks like, I did this one myself:

Click for larger image, note that the airport is in the middle of the UHI bubble.

Russ Steele did a comparison as a guest post here of the data from the Reno ASOS USHCN station to a RAWS station run by the Forest Service a few miles away and writes:

Last year, I found a Remote Automated Weather Station operated by the Forest Service at Desert Springs that is 11.28 miles due north of the Reno Airport, in a remote area well away from urban influences. The annual temperature in desert far from urban influence in 2007 was 52.54 F, which was 2.8 F below the Airport ASOS just eleven miles away. As you can see this site is quite remote.

Desert_springs

Desert Springs, click for larger image.

Here is a plot from last year comparing the Desert Springs and Reno ASOS.

Reno_DS-RAWS

But location and encroachments within the airport aren’t the only issues with ASOS, there is the ASOS temperature sensor itself, which has been shown to be inaccurate. There’s the famous HO83 temperature-dewpoint sensor, a product of  “lowest bidder” engineering.

Hygrothermometer
HO83 ASOS Hygrothermometer

(temperature/dewpoint sensor)

The HO-83 is know to have a warm bias between 0.5C to 0.7C. as shown here.

Ho83h7

The most famous problem occurred in Tucson, AZ in the  mid 1980’s where a malfunctioning HO83 unit created dozens of new high temperature records for the city, even though surrounding areas had no such measured extremes. Unfortunately those new high temperature records including the all time high of 117 degrees F, became part of the official climate record and still stand today. Here is a New York Times article that highlights the problem and a research paper from Kessler et al outlining similar problems in Albany New York as well as Tucson.

One of the biggest problems was that the early design of the HO83 allowed exhaust air (warmed by the warm side of Peltier chip) to recirculate from the mushroom shaped cap down the sides of the chamber, and back into the air inlet at the bottom. The problem was solved a few years later by the addition of a metal skirt which deflects the exhaust air.

ho83-original-modified.png

Unfortunately, even though NOAA has modernization plans in place for the ASOS network, there are still some of the original designs that remain in operation today, such as this USHCN station which is the official climate station of record for New Orleans:

NOLA_H083_closeup

Photo from sufracestations.org volunteer Fred Perkins 8/25/07 click for larger photo.

Thus, the HO83 induced bias first noted in the mid 1980’s continues in the surface temperature record even today.

While only 5% of the USHCN network is ASOS, the biases produced by the HO83 are quite large, and there appears to be no adjustments to remove the bias. Since determining the individual maintenance records and biases of each ASOS station would be a significant task, the simplest solution would be to remove all ASOS stations from the USHCN record set.

But the most damning evidence that ASOS stations are probably lwarmer biased than AWOS stations comes from this internal NOAA technical paper on May 29th, 2001, from Brian Fehrn of the NWS office in Elko, NV who did a year long side by side comparison of an ASOS station being installed just 500 feet away from an AWOS station being decommissioned.

Here, courtesy Russ Steele, is a photo of the Elko ASOS station, which happens also to be a USHCN climate station of record:

Fehrn’s  table of monthly data tells the story pretty well:

Figure 1

Average Temp
Months
ASOS
AWOS
September 57.80 55.80
October 47.61 45.60
November 40.72 39.33
December* 27.06 25.94
January 30.85 29.97
February 36.79 35.95
March 37.68 37.27
April 48.78 48.38
May 54.63 53.58
June 63.87 61.72
July** 69.04 66.18
August*** 69.58 67.06
Note: *ASOS Data fro mthe 5th through 9th and the 31st are missing

**ASOS Data from the 19th are missing

***ASOS Data from the 9th, 10th, 14th, 23rd, and 24th are missing

His conclusion says it all, emphasis mine:

While this study encompasses only a year, the data seem to indicate the uncommissioned ASOS records warmer temperatures than the AWOS. With recent reports and concerns about global warming, it is of note that this comparison of “unofficial” data to the official observations show that instrumentation located only a couple hundred yards apart can give a notable temperature discrepance. It is not the purpose of this study to determine what causes the Elko ASOS to record warmer temperatures than the AWOS. The main message is it appears the ASOS will probably record higher temperature values than the AWOS once the ASOS is commissioned and becomes the official site. This study should prove beneficial to forecasters once the ASOS becomes the official temperature site. Forecasters will be aware of the average temperature discrepancy and, if all other factors remain equal, it is quite possible that Elko may experience a rise in the overall temperature over time when the ASOS is used as the official data for Elko, Nevada.

So when we see public information statements like the one yesterday from the National Weather Service telling us that the ASOS system is more acceptable that an AWOS system calibrated just the day before, I’m quite comfortable in calling BS on that statement.

We shouldn’t measure climate data at airports with aviation instruments, period.

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Steve in SC
January 17, 2009 4:35 pm

Smokey
You are correct in that proper calibration is a very procedural and exacting matter.
Any calibration is going to involve some interpolation. So your measured temperature is never exactly what you calibrated to.
It has been my experience that reporters don’t know an RTD from a bass fiddle.
About the weather sensors, are the MMTS sensors Thermistors or RTDs?
I would think that converting them all to RTDs with wireless digital transmitters would get rid of the cabling issue the Anthony seems to uncover every time a sensor station is surveyed.
The thing that gets me is it ain’t rocket science yet everyone in the bureaucracy can not understand temperature measurement to save their worthless lives.
I hope that somewhere the unadjusted raw data is kept so that at sometime we can unravel some of the more stupid adjustments to see what the real temperature record is.

David Corcoran
January 17, 2009 4:42 pm

Anthony have you seen this interesting post about the drop-offs of stations in Siberia?
OOPS, We Forgot Siberia… Part Deux!

Scott Finegan
January 17, 2009 4:47 pm

The airport at Rochelle, IL is located South of Interstate 88, and west of Route 251. It is surrounded by farm field for the most part.
http://maps.google.com/maps?f=q&source=s_q&hl=en&geocode=&q=rochelle,+il&sll=37.0625,-95.677068&sspn=34.999041,56.25&ie=UTF8&ll=41.892023,-89.076998&spn=0.004017,0.010943&t=h&z=17

Tim L
January 17, 2009 4:52 pm

Oh one more thing … lol …. heat content at 10F and colder gets strange.
while driving along it is not unusual to see a 5F change from a dip in the road to a peak. also UHI is HUGE at such cold temps. time temp signs are +2-3F off.
hardwoods cover +5F Pines +8F.
Point is if you have a temp censer covered by snow it will read higher.
Was a new calibrated temp censer snow brushed off?
hummmmm………….. Doh!

Arthur Glass
January 17, 2009 4:55 pm

Suffolk County Airport in the ritzy Hamptons recorded -13 for the past two mornings. No acknowledgement at all of an ‘extreme event’ from the Upton regional office of the NWS. (h/t Joe Bastardi).
I guess cold is uncool.

Scott Finegan
January 17, 2009 5:00 pm

I am less troubled by the low temperature at Rochelle, IL than I am by the low temperatures reported on TV news regularly for Aurora, IL. Aurora has a heat island, unlike Rochelle. Heat islands tend to hold temperatures up at night. For several days running the temps (in Aurora) have been about 6 degrees lower than surrounding locations. The news casters always say it is because the thermometer is in a pocket that collects cold air. Give me a break.

January 17, 2009 5:01 pm

Dumb question from not-a-science-geek – why not just use the satellite data? What problems are there with the accuracy of that data? I do realise that satellites measure the temperature of the lower atmosphere, not surface temperature, but if they are more accurate, shouldn’t we rely on those measurements?

January 17, 2009 5:01 pm

To:
Steve in SC
You certainly don’t need to duck. Not on this site. Information is king. Thank you Anthony (and moderators).
But like the post displays, there are differences in the two systems and they are not necessarily related to the sensor technology (but to the overall design quality of the units). It’s fine if the new one is more accurate (and registers higher readings). So, for an “accurate” history we may need to adjust the old system readings UP. But with no known adjustment in the GISS recordset to accommodate the discrepancies… it just looks like it got warmer.
All of this puts me squarely in the Satellite camp. Let’s ditch all this GISS adjustment hocus pocus.
PS- Has anyone ever actually compared the areas represented/covered by earth station measurements vs. satellite measurements? I would assume (totally guessing) that the Satellites are covering 60-80% of the globe at 100% saturation. How does that compare to the speckled earth station record (not even considering the UHI and QC issues)? Would 2% be a ridiculously low guess?
Back to lurking…

Richard Sharpe
January 17, 2009 5:51 pm
crosspatch
January 17, 2009 6:14 pm

David Corcoran:
That blog posting is just a tiny bit misleading. It says:

If you click on the blue circles it will tell you the name of the station and how many years it was in operation. A lot of them were in operation for 100 years or more.

Actually, most of the stations are still there and still recording data that is available over the Internet. They aren’t “gone” they just aren’t included in the NOAA data set any longer.

Traciatim
January 17, 2009 6:15 pm

A city in my neck of the woods just posted temperature colder than it’s 125 year old record. That’s kind of interesting.
http://www.cbc.ca/canada/new-brunswick/story/2009/01/16/nb-frigid-temperatures.html

January 17, 2009 6:21 pm

Just found this (h/t to Joe Bastardi & Accuwx pro)
Possible new state record in Maine as well :
00
NOUS41 KCAR 170454 CCA
PNSCAR
MEZ001>006-010-011-015>017-029>032-160051-
PUBLIC INFORMATION STATEMENT
NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE CARIBOU ME
0955 AM EST FRI JAN 16 2009
**********POTENTIAL STATEWIDE RECORD MINIMUM TEMPERATURE*************
AT 0730 AM EST THIS MORNING A USGS GAGE AT BIG BLACK RIVER RECORDED
A LOW TEMPERATURE OF -50F. THIS EXCEEDS THE CURRENT STATEWIDE
RECORD LOW TEMPERATURE OF -48F SET ON JANUARY 19TH…1925 AT VAN
BUREN. THIS REPORT IS CONSIDERED UNOFFICIAL UNTIL A REVIEW OF THE
EQUIPMENT AND DATA BY THE STATE CLIMATE EXTREMES COMMITTEE AS TO
THE VALIDITY OF THIS REPORT. IF THE COMMITTEE ASCERTAINS THAT THIS
IS INDEED A VALID REPORT…A SEPARATE PUBLIC INFORMATION STATEMENT
WILL BE ISSUED AT THAT TIME.
$$
PJR
Link to original :
http://www.weather.gov/view/prodsByState.php?state=ME&prodtype=public
REPLY: It is not just there, but records are falling statewide. – Anthony

January 17, 2009 6:57 pm

Interesting website, Michelle.
Good questions.

Novoburgo
January 17, 2009 7:10 pm

Jeff L (18:21:23) :
POTENTIAL STATEWIDE RECORD MINIMUM
More on above.
One other reporting station, Nine Mile Bridge, tied the record @-48F and the Town of Allagash missed it by a degree, -47F. Big Black River is in with a cluster of Northern Maine stations that usually report coldest statewide readings. This doesn’t stand out as anything unusual for this particular event (other than of course an all time state record).

Edwin French
January 17, 2009 7:11 pm

I live near ROCHELLE IL in Rockford IL. I work with a part time fire fighter, and the morning of the -36F reading, he told me that a few of the fire trucks would not run because the diesel fuel had turned to slush. If i recall, a temperature much lower than -25F is needed to transform into slush. This leads me to question the official reading of -25F in Rockford IL.

Rod Smith
January 17, 2009 7:14 pm

“FOR THE PURPOSE OF DETERMINING RECORD
TEMPERATURES FOR THE STATE…ONLY ASOS AND
COOPERATIVE OBSERVER OBSERVATIONS WILL BE USED SINCE BOTH OF
THESE OBSERVATIONS ARE QUALITY CONTROLLED BY THE
NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE.”
Quality controlled? Is this a joke of some sort?

Jeff Alberts
January 17, 2009 7:27 pm

I live near ROCHELLE IL in Rockford IL. I work with a part time fire fighter, and the morning of the -36F reading, he told me that a few of the fire trucks would not run because the diesel fuel had turned to slush. If i recall, a temperature much lower than -25F is needed to transform into slush. This leads me to question the official reading of -25F in Rockford IL.

Didn’t they know they were supposed to start the trucks every few hours? Had to do that in the winter in Germany.

H.R.
January 17, 2009 7:30 pm

“AT 0730 AM EST THIS MORNING A USGS GAGE AT BIG BLACK RIVER RECORDED A LOW TEMPERATURE OF -50F. THIS EXCEEDS THE CURRENT STATEWIDE RECORD LOW TEMPERATURE OF -48F SET ON JANUARY 19TH…1925 AT VANBUREN. THIS REPORT IS CONSIDERED UNOFFICIAL UNTIL A REVIEW OF THE EQUIPMENT AND DATA BY THE STATE CLIMATE EXTREMES COMMITTEE AS TO THE VALIDITY OF THIS REPORT. IF THE COMMITTEE ASCERTAINS THAT THIS IS INDEED A VALID REPORT…”
I suppose the data will be compared to (sarc on) a nearby site in Las Vegas (sarc off) and declared invalid. Setting aside my cynicism, I hope that we get a followup report that the equipment was in cal, the data properly recorded, and the report is valid.

tonawandatom
January 17, 2009 8:31 pm

Question about sensors – What’s a RTD? Differentian thermal expansion of liquids in borosilicate tubes I understand. Variable electrical resistance in partial conductors I can grasp. Thermally- induced voltages at junctions of dissimilar conducting metals I have actually enjoyed – sort of. once. in lab because I had to. years ago…
But What aree RTDs and what makes them wonderful?

January 17, 2009 9:33 pm

I wonder what Mr Schmidt would make of this? GISS’s sophisticated UHI compensation software no doubt takes all the variance into account and provides an accurate temperature record, and pigs might fly.
I will no longer trust anything that GISS issue on surface temperatures, an excellent article.

The Doktor
January 17, 2009 11:38 pm

You folks are simply amazing with your knowledge of this subject. Great posts.
Regarding:
Edwin French (19:11:46) :
I live near ROCHELLE IL in Rockford IL. I work with a part time fire fighter, and the morning of the -36F reading, he told me that a few of the fire trucks would not run because the diesel fuel had turned to slush.

I live near Rochelle, too (well, close enough to have to evacuate if the nuclear plant went ”3 Mile Island”), and it’s been so cold my butt checks froze together.

E.M.Smith
Editor
January 17, 2009 11:42 pm

tty (16:18:41) :
A distance of a kilometer or two and a few tens of meters in altitude can easily mean a difference of 5 degrees centigrade (= 10 F). In swedish there is even a special word for such places: “köldhål” (”cold-hole”).

The Sunset Garden Book is great because it makes a much finer distinction between climate zones than does the USGS. 50 ish zones nationwide vs 10. They call such zones ‘cold basins’ I think… and the warmer cold air shedding area ‘thermal belts’.
It would be interesting to map stations with ‘odd’ behaviour onto the Sunset Garden map and see what their zone description says… They talk about things like wind effects, humidity, tendency to fog or low clouds, compression wind heating. A decent mini climate description.
Why? Because the plant doesn’t care what you think or what your thermometer says, it’s going to react to the real complex of wind, temp, humidity, first & last frost, degree days… so they really want to know a plant will grow someplace before they say it will.
I have both the “Western Garden Book” and the national one (It was a bit hard to find the national one in California… lots of folks here seem to think the world ends just outside of Reno / Las Vegas… I think I picked it up in Texas.)

January 17, 2009 11:54 pm

Hello everyone,
Good discussion. I’d like to throw in some thoughts here.
I am a professional meteorologist who lives 15 miles from that AWOS, and uses the data from it regularly in my work. I can say absolutely without a doubt that the thermometer at Rochelle (KRPJ)’s AWOS has had a cold bias for a long time. What is also not being reported is that the Rochelle sewer treatment plant recorded a -28, just a few miles away, an official coop climate station.
I’ve visited that AWOS before. Here’s a snapshot of it, along with an NIU meteorology professor who was actually there when it all happened (no, he didn’t take a mercury thermometer with him, unfortunately):
http://thetae.blogspot.com/
He and I have seen the same thing: a 5 to 15 degree cold bias, for years there, with that AWOS. Worse, during the summer, that AWOS is surrounded by corn, making the dewpoints anaomalously high. Surrounded so closely, in fact, that several years ago I got to the site and found ears of corn and stalks leaning through that fence. That’s a big no-no, and in fact, the AWOS at one point was 48 hours away from being decommisioned and removed unless the corn was destroyed around it. I went back there a few days later and found the corn plowed over by apparently the farmer who planted it in a 50′ radius around the fence.
Then, there are maintenance issues. When the Illinois AWOS sites came online via NADIN, they had been maintained locally. Well, I use “maintained” very loosely…many were hardly maintained at all, and many instruments weren’t working or wildly off or out of calibration. At DeKalb, IL, their AWOS had a busted dewpoint sensor for almost a year before I finally saw it get fixed this winter. It was reading way too low. I’ve heard from pilots that as long as the altimeter setting is correct, that’s what really counts; DeKalb’s airport staff is always on top of an AWOS problem there and reports it quickly, but sometimes it takes considerable time for stuff to get fixed (not the airport’s fault).
Finally, error thresholds between AWOS’s and ASOS’s are different. AWOS error standards and accuracy for temp and dewpoint are indeed lower than ASOS, regardless how good the sensor and related equipment is. Again, this does NOT mean that I am saying ASOS’s are necessarily more accurate; I am saying that the standards the FAA uses are not as good as the NWS. And nor am I saying that the NWS holds tightly to standards for every official climate station; your many illustrations prove otherwise.
But, I can personally vouch for KRPJ’s cold bias, as I look at my surface maps each morning. I would have loved to take Congerville’s 1/5/1999 record away of -36, or at least tie it…but knowing what I know about that station, there’s no way I’d sign my John Hancock stating the record was tied or broken. The thermometer definitely is better since it was calibrated, but I still don’t trust it.
So in my humble opinion, there is no misguiding going on here. KRPJ’s thermometer readings have had known problems for quite some time, right up to and into at least one of the two events in question. And while I cringe and bang my head against the wall every time you show another site that would be better removed than continue to mess up the database, on this one issue I must disagree that this data should have been made official. There was no conspiracy here, and I’m clearly biased in that I wanted to see a station up in northern Illinois take down Congerville since they set the record. 🙂 But even so, in my opinion, I could not and would not say Rochelle’s -36 F low was valid based on its past history and the error which took a few years to (maybe) correct.

E.M.Smith
Editor
January 18, 2009 12:28 am

Michelle (17:01:25) :
Dumb question from not-a-science-geek – why not just use the satellite data? What problems are there with the accuracy of that data? I do realise that satellites measure the temperature of the lower atmosphere, not surface temperature, but if they are more accurate, shouldn’t we rely on those measurements?

There are a couple of ‘geeky’ things to consider.
1. They measure different things (near ground vs up in the air somewhere for the satellite). This makes it hard to compare things like, oh, historic records. And for places where, for example, that cold air collects in a shallow basin, people usually care more that it’s -4 in the basin where they live than that it’s +10 up in the sky somewhere.
2. Airports in particular. There is something called ‘density altitude’. If I can just barely take off at a 7000′ airport on a cold day, I might not be able to get off the ground at all on a hot day. Heat makes the air thinner so I get less lift. My airplane flies like it was at 10,000′. Forgetting this kills a few pilots every so often at high airports on hot days… Even more of them land, then discover they can’t get off again until a cool morning comes around. (They can fly in because of higher speed on approach and lower weight if low on fuel.)
Pilots need a temperature at the airport near the runway to know if they can get off the ground, or not. We then try to use airport thermometers for climate change purposes and that is a mistake, flat out. The goals are completely different. The pilots must know the temperature of the extra hot air over the runway tarmac with jet exhaust where their wing will be. The climatologist wants the temperature over there in the cool away from the runway… Any wonder the airport thermometers are located over the hot tarmac near the runway? Who’s lives depend on them every time they take off and land? (It pains me just a bit when we, here, complain about the ‘poor’ siting of an airport thermometer when I know that as a pilot I want that thermometer as close to the runway as I can get it and that a 5 degree low reading from the grassy knoll can kill me…)
3. We have a lot of data from the past for the ground stations. Not so much for the satellites. It is ‘bad form’ to graft one kind of data onto another kind since you can get what looks like a sudden change of trend that is really just a change of technique (like the hockey stick graph…) We would want to have both run for a long time just to be sure we knew they were working right (keep a ‘continuous data set’ going) to avoid hockey stick problems of our own when doing longer term analysis.

E.M.Smith
Editor
January 18, 2009 1:43 am

Edwin French (19:11:46) :
I live near ROCHELLE IL in Rockford IL. I work with a part time fire fighter, and the morning of the -36F reading, he told me that a few of the fire trucks would not run because the diesel fuel had turned to slush. If i recall, a temperature much lower than -25F is needed to transform into slush. This leads me to question the official reading of -25F in Rockford IL.

Diesel is not a very good thermometer. There are 2 different things that might be described by ‘slush’. Cloud point and pour point. Cloud point is when little crystals of wax or other solids start to form. This can clog filters until warmed back up (set some olive oil in the fridge and check it every few hours. First it will get cloudy. Pour point is when the stuff turns to jelly so much that won’t flow (with or without clouding). Let your OO sit long enough in a cold enough fridge it will set up to jelly.
“Winter” Diesel has lower cloud and pour points. You don’t know how much winterizing any given batch has had. (#1 Diesel -the winter kind – can be much more like kerosene, where #2 is more like home heating oil) Different makers use different amounts of different anti-gel and anti-cloud agents and their ‘blend stock’ has different characteristics, these change seasonally, and sometimes break down in storage. Do you know the age of the Diesel in the trucks? In their fuel storage? (if they have their own fuel storage?)
Biodiesel has much worse cloud and pour points than good old #2 (esters of fatty acids freeze easier than petroleum… some as high as +40F). There has been a recent push to put more biodiesel in all Diesel. While I’m in favor of this generally, it will result in more gelled DIesel in winter if folks don’t match the fuel to the weather right. (My old Mercedes manual says to blend up to 25% regular gasoline or up to 50% kerosene into the fuel in winter to prevent gelling / cloud problems. I use more of these ‘additives’ if running biodiesel.) The first thing I would check is the ‘bioblend’ standards for the state.
The bottom line is that Diesel is a really lousy thermometer and that both cloud and pour points are all over the place seasonally, batch to batch, vendor to vendor, and fuel type to fuel type. Most of the time it doesn’t matter. Most of the time…
Sidebar: I once took the Diesel to Tahoe for a skii trip. Filled up in the lowlands (warm valley) and headed up. Pulled into hotel and parked. Long night at about 5-10F… Up at 6am, Diesel was a non-start. After a lot of cranking and some other tricks to add heat, got it barely started. Drove to the hardware store and bought 2 gallons of ‘lamp oil’ and dumped it in. Then found a local gas station and filled up with local ‘winterized’ Diesel. No trouble the rest of the trip. Why? In the lowlands of California they never need winterized or #1 Diesel so it isn’t sold… I now always fill up with ‘local blend’ as soon as I reach a ‘cold place’ …