• seejur@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    I always found fahrenheit a lot more arbitrary: in Celsius 0 is the freezing of water, so if you are driving/walking, that is a very important temperature to look out for. Also 30 being hot or 100 being hot outside does not really make a difference. Some people find 30 hot, some other find it OK, since its subjective anyway

    • Sludgeyy@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      Water freezes at 0°C at standard pressure, sea level.

      If you are above or below, it will be different.

      Saying “It’s not 0°C outside so there’s no ice on the road” is dumb. Because there could definitely be ice on the road.

      You should be looking out for other things while driving. Not if the one thermometer, who knows where, is saying that it’s 0°C or not.

      • seejur@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        As usual, there should be a bit of flexibility in there. I am not saying “oh, it’s 0C, therefore ALL water in all town is frozen , lets wait until it gets to 1C so all water melt”. But more on the line “oh, its around 0C (+ or - 5C), lets be careful while driving because some of the streets might have ice”. Farenheit freezing temp is 32 I think? Thats VERY arbitrary. A lot more than C.

        • Sludgeyy@lemmy.world
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          1 year ago
          • or - 5°C

          23°F to 41°F is -5°C to 5°C

          If it’s below 40°F I’d be cautious of Ice. Once again, it doesn’t matter that water freezes at exactly 32°F at standard pressure.

          It’s like boiling water. No one puts a thermometer in water to make sure that it hits 100°C exactly.

          150°F water will scald you in a second (65°C)

          140°F water will scaled you in 3 seconds (60°C)

          120°F water will scaled you in 10 minutes (50°C)

          +100°F water has the potential to scaled you (~40°C)

          I’d rather know that +100°F water has a chance to burn me than remembering +40°C has a chance.

          That’s way more important knowledge than the freezing and boiling temperatures of water at standard pressure.