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  2. NE-NJ and CNJ and parts of SI run closer to EWR than NYC
  3. yes if blockbuster means 40+ 90 degree days and not the 3 months as a whole, yes. 2016 , 2020 were very hot summers as well. Lets see who gets to 90 east of the Hudson and Narrows Wed - Fri to start tallying and tacking on this year albeit late but a start.
  4. damn some of our coldsnaps and heatwaves match up. How was Summer 1944 out your way? 1948 and 1949? 1944 had 8 days in a row of 95+ 1948 had three straight 100+ days (later matched in 1966) and 1949 had 5 days of 99+ 1953 had two separate superheatwaves here with 4 100+ days split between them lol 1955 set the record for most 95+ days at NYC (16). July 1936 still has the NYC record (106)
  5. Remind us what we’re looking for again in the numbers?
  6. between 11 pm and 2 am based on the charts Walt posted
  7. west coast? I wonder how far south the good stuff got to?
  8. 41.0 for the low here this am, currently 67.7/37.9 at 2:30 pm (and high for the day) with hazy overcast (guessing smoke).
  9. in a few days it'll be fine. below normal weather like this never lasts for that long, particularly during a dry pattern.
  10. the wind makes it really bad for allergies =\
  11. Thats crazy they typically come out after July 10
  12. Couple of raindrops! I was really worried we were gonna get through the day without precipitation.
  13. I believe it's not as expensive as you think because the government gives you huge incentives (well they used to....) plus you can rent and apply the rental towards buying it later. https://www.brownstoner.com/sponsored/monthly-bill-for-solar-panels/ What’s the Monthly Bill for Solar Panels? How to Beat 40 Percent Energy Premiums Check out this Con Edison monthly bill for solar that’s just $18.62. Do solar panels reduce electricity bills? In a city where monthly electric bills regularly climb into hundreds of dollars, solar panels are proving to be a game changer. The featured Queens bill demonstrates how a solar system completely eliminated the supply charges, leaving only minimal delivery fees. The trick is the customer’s solar panels generated enough power to cover all household energy needs, resulting in $0 supply charges. Do you get charged for having solar panels? While solar panel owners still receive a utility bill, the charges are drastically different from typical NYC utility costs. They typically pay: A basic service charge (around $20) Minimal delivery fees Associated taxes Again — gone are the sky-high supply charges that make New York’s energy costs among the nation’s highest. Solar panels vs. electricity bill: What’s the difference? Traditional NYC electricity bills include both supply and delivery charges, plus various fees and taxes that reflect the city’s premium energy costs. With solar panels, customers primarily see: Dramatically reduced or eliminated supply charges Continued basic service fees Net metering credits for excess production Is it really typical for supply charges on a monthly bill to go to zero? Generally, yes: The average residential customer sees $0 supply charges. It can vary depending on a lot of factors but that’s true for a lot of homeowners who adopt solar. It changes with the seasons too. Homeowners often see their supply charges zero out during the spring/summer/fall, but then they incur charges during the winter months, due to less sunshine. But that’s where net metering comes into play. Typically you’re building up a bank of credits during the sunnier months, and those offset supply charges during the winter. Are there financial incentives to go solar? Yes. Thanks to enticing financial incentives, going solar in NYC has never been more accessible. Homeowners can take advantage of four benefits: NYSERDA rebates knock thousands off upfront costs, federal tax credits return 30 percent of the system cost, a 30 percent NYC Property Tax Abatement, and a $5,000 NYS Income Tax Credit — plus net metering that lets you bank excess power for future use. The results are visible everywhere — from Brooklyn brownstones to Queens single-family homes, solar panels have become as much a part of NYC’s roofscape as water towers. Do you want to save $50,000 on electricity over the lifetime of your system?
  14. I imagine its possilbe if the smoke was able to mix downward. It appears the smoke issue is in the forecast for this Tuesday as well from Accuweather for our area. .
  15. 100 million people rent. They're not putting solar panels. And even if you own your property, you'd have to shell out a ton of money up front. Half the country can't even afford one emergency, solar panels aren't happening for regular joe.
  16. This is a great point, we might need to wait for the AMO to switch to the negative phase for this to happen. When the AMO switches to negative we get more 100 and above degree days in the summer and more 0 and below degrees days in the winter. Cases in point Years we went 0 and below in the winter and 100 and above in the summer: 1977, 1983, 1993, 1994 I think we also did both in the 40s-60s period several times. When we switched to a +AMO our rainfall went up and our 100+ days in the summer and 0- days in the winter both dwindled.
  17. It’s true. Lately it seems worse than it used to be.
  18. LGA, JFK, etc all had their last blockbuster hot summer in 2010, LGA had 48 days 90+ JFK had 32 days 90+ and also set the record for 10 days of 95+ and tied the record of 3 100+ days.
  19. 50s in Tolland. I mean glad we don’t live there.
  20. it really sucks for allergies, if you have a chemical that would block pollination of whatever crap is causing these allergies I'd be happy to spray it.
  21. LGA and JFK's last really hot summer on this scale was also 2010. I consider that the peak of what's possible here in terms of summer heat. EWR is a furnace, it doesn't even belong in the same climate zone with the rest of us.
  22. SSB cannot take any more riders. Dead weight and not able to right self
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