On 18/09/2016 17:12, xmetman wrote:
On Sunday, 18 September 2016 15:33:11 UTC+1, Len Wood wrote:
On Sunday, 18 September 2016 14:54:27 UTC+1, N_Cook wrote:
Have I got this right , currently daylight saving time in France as in
UK but extra hour ahead of us.
So plot times 0200,0800,1400,2000 correspond to 0100,0700,1300,1900 BST
(0,6,12,1800 GMT)
Different start and end days of daylight saving , but in the depths of
winter.
If plot times are 0100,0700,1300,1900 they then still correspond to GMT
0000 0600,1200,1800
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
They are all UTC, i.e. GMT i.e atm 1 hour behind BST, AFAIK.
For example he
http://www.meteociel.fr/observations...hp?region=eur2
Len
Wembury
Yes Len's right, the times of all meteorological observations are UTC.
I'd managed to convince myself that runs would not be hindcast ,so a run
at 12:10 to 12:40 GMT must be for a 13:00 GMT forcast and successive 12
hour forecasts, in the MetO case. Also 1,7,13,19hr ouputs would mean all
4 four would be in one day , avoiding the 00:00 complication of which
day it falls into.
Any ideas what the "coloured diodes" proprly translates as, in the
almost complete machine translation of
Ces cartes sont réalisées Ã* partir des données brutes du modèle anglais
UKMO (UK Met Office) avec une résolution de 1.25deg entre 0h et 72h et
2.5deg entre 96 et 144h. Les réactualisations commencent vers 6h10 et
18h10, une réactualisation dure environ 30 minutes. Les diodes colorées
près des échéances permettent de suivre l'avancement de la génération
des cartes de
prévisions du modèle UKMO.
These charts are made from raw data from the English model UKMO (UK Met
Office) with a resolution of 1.25deg between 0h and 72h and 2.5deg
between 96 and 144h. The runs start around 6:10 am and 6:10 pm., an
update takes about 30 minutes. The colored diodes near maturity can
track the progress of the generation of UKMO model forecast charts.