National Weather Service Text Product
AFOS product CLISPB
Dates interpreted at 00:00 UTCDisplaying AFOS PIL: CLISPB
Product Timestamp: 2005-10-11 12:43 UTC
Bulk Download
Bulk Download
Bulk Download Help
This bulk download tool provides the NWS text
in a raw form, hopefully directly usable by your processing system.
You can either provide a complete 6-character PIL/AFOS ID or provide
the 3-character base ID (e.g., AFD). The start and end
dates represent 00 UTC for those dates. The Zip format is useful as
the filenames will have the product timestamp, which is useful for
when the product format has ambiguous timestamps.
000
CDUS46 KPQR 111243
CLISPB
CLIMATE REPORT
NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE PORTLAND OREGON
543 AM PDT TUE OCT 11 2005
...................................
...THE SCAPPOOSE CLIMATE SUMMARY FOR OCTOBER 10 2005...
CLIMATE NORMAL PERIOD 9999 TO 9999
CLIMATE RECORD PERIOD 9999 TO 9999
WEATHER ITEM OBSERVED TIME LAST
VALUE (LST) YEAR
........................................
TEMPERATURE (F)
YESTERDAY
MAXIMUM 61 121 PM
MINIMUM 41 650 AM
PRECIPITATION (IN)
YESTERDAY T 0.00
MONTH TO DATE 1.03 1.73
SINCE OCT 1 1.03 1.73
SINCE JAN 1 23.66 5.47
DEGREE DAYS
HEATING
YESTERDAY 14 8
MONTH TO DATE 117 66
SINCE SEP 1 272 189
SINCE JUL 1 304 196
COOLING
YESTERDAY 0 0
MONTH TO DATE 0 0
SINCE SEP 1 18 9
SINCE JAN 1 280 261
........................................
WIND (MPH)
HIGHEST WIND SPEED 8 HIGHEST WIND DIRECTION SE (150)
HIGHEST GUST SPEED 9 HIGHEST GUST DIRECTION S (160)
AVERAGE WIND SPEED 1.6
SKY COVER
AVERAGE SKY COVER 0.6
WEATHER CONDITIONS
THE FOLLOWING WEATHER WAS RECORDED YESTERDAY.
LIGHT RAIN
FOG
FOG W/VISIBILITY <= 1/4 MILE
RELATIVE HUMIDITY (PERCENT)
HIGHEST 100 1200 AM
LOWEST 72 1000 AM
AVERAGE 86
..........................................................
SUNRISE AND SUNSET
OCTOBER 11 2005.......SUNRISE 723 AM PDT SUNSET 632 PM PDT
OCTOBER 12 2005.......SUNRISE 724 AM PDT SUNSET 630 PM PDT
- INDICATES NEGATIVE NUMBERS.
R INDICATES RECORD WAS SET OR TIED.
MM INDICATES DATA IS MISSING.
T INDICATES TRACE AMOUNT.
$$