Florida Coasters

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Florida Coasters

Florida Coasters

@FL_Coasters

Often sarcastic. Creator of coaster memes. Low credit count but high coaster IQ (and quality takes). Lover of RMC, hater of (new) B&M. Still #BuildTheGIGA

Tampa Bay Katılım Şubat 2019
205 Takip Edilen472 Takipçiler
Florida Coasters
Florida Coasters@FL_Coasters·
Ok technically I visited Kings Island twice but the first time I was 7 and didn’t ride anything besides the, at the time, Fairly Odd Coaster, so I’m not counting that. I need another go on Diamondback to see if it’s actually as bad and rough as I remember
Coastin' USA w/Clay@ClayPRC

Name a park that you've only visited once, that you most look forward to making a second visit to. My choice would be Silverwood. How about you? (Remember has to be a place you've only visited once prior.)

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Florida Coasters
Florida Coasters@FL_Coasters·
@Cyn1calCrusader “Humidity is far higher here”, yet the best analogue for a British summer in the US is famously hot and humid Seattle /s
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The Cynical Crusader
The Cynical Crusader@Cyn1calCrusader·
So, jokes aside, to understand why the heat is worse in the UK than say Arizona for example, the answer is quite long... First it's the Humidity, it's far higher here. The UK's island location and prevailing south-westerly winds bring moist sea air, so heatwaves are often humid rather than dry. In contrast, many of the hottest US states (e.g., Arizona, Nevada, New Mexico) have dry desert heat where sweat evaporates quickly, so you actually feel cooler despite higher temperatures. Even humid US regions (like the Southeast) usually have widespread air conditioning to offset it. Second, the buildings and Infrastructure that we have all are designed to Trap Heat, not Release It. UK homes are built for cold, damp winters: thick brick/stone walls, heavy insulation, small windows, and designs that retain warmth. During a heatwave, they turn into ovens, solar gain through windows builds up, and there is poor ventilation or passive cooling features like overhangs, shutters, or light-coloured roofs. Plus, poor air conditioning: Only about 5% of UK homes have AC (vs. ~90% in the US). It's not standard because it's rarely needed most of the year, but during spikes it's a nightmare. Also, retrofitting is expensive and tricky in old terraced houses or listed buildings. This extended to public transport, schools, offices, and even hospitals as they often lack cooling. Finally, most importantly, we have zero acclimatisation. Meaning it's just as hot at night as it is during the day. Britons aren't physiologically or culturally used to sustained heat. We're properly white! So, a sudden jump from typical UK summer temps feels extreme, and the body struggles more without gradual adaptation. Heatwaves often bring "tropical nights" (temps staying above 20 °C), so homes don't cool down overnight. You can't sleep, recover, or anything which just compounds fatigue, dehydration, etc. Drier US heat often cools significantly at night. That is all topped up with the fact that we have longer summer daylight at the UK's higher latitude meaning more hours of solar heating. Hope this long explanation that no one wanted clears this right up...
NewsWire@NewsWire_US

UK Heatwave Ignites Calls for Widespread Air Conditioning – Government Urged to End Resistance

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Florida Coasters
Florida Coasters@FL_Coasters·
@dall_giovanni when y’all die of heat stroke in 95 degree weather it just sounds like a skill issue to me
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Florida Coasters
Florida Coasters@FL_Coasters·
@Andrea19aaa @fatkintsugi An EF4 or 5 tornado is clapping every European house with absolutely zero issue lol. Bro these things throw 2x4s through concrete and tear asphalt off roads
Florida Coasters tweet mediaFlorida Coasters tweet mediaFlorida Coasters tweet media
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tinashe is coming
tinashe is coming@fatkintsugi·
“this heat in the uk is killing me”
GIF
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TheHausParty
TheHausParty@LoudHausParty·
@owo_jamie we have hurricanes and tornadoes you have high humidity
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Vera
Vera@Drakesnarl·
I live in the southern US. 90%+ humidity with 90f-100f+ temps are a regular occurrence here. I also don't have a/c to run to. Fans and cold drinks are it. All Summer long, and partly into Fall unless we get lucky and get an early cold snap. I don't wanna hear it.
The Cynical Crusader@Cyn1calCrusader

So, jokes aside, to understand why the heat is worse in the UK than say Arizona for example, the answer is quite long... First it's the Humidity, it's far higher here. The UK's island location and prevailing south-westerly winds bring moist sea air, so heatwaves are often humid rather than dry. In contrast, many of the hottest US states (e.g., Arizona, Nevada, New Mexico) have dry desert heat where sweat evaporates quickly, so you actually feel cooler despite higher temperatures. Even humid US regions (like the Southeast) usually have widespread air conditioning to offset it. Second, the buildings and Infrastructure that we have all are designed to Trap Heat, not Release It. UK homes are built for cold, damp winters: thick brick/stone walls, heavy insulation, small windows, and designs that retain warmth. During a heatwave, they turn into ovens, solar gain through windows builds up, and there is poor ventilation or passive cooling features like overhangs, shutters, or light-coloured roofs. Plus, poor air conditioning: Only about 5% of UK homes have AC (vs. ~90% in the US). It's not standard because it's rarely needed most of the year, but during spikes it's a nightmare. Also, retrofitting is expensive and tricky in old terraced houses or listed buildings. This extended to public transport, schools, offices, and even hospitals as they often lack cooling. Finally, most importantly, we have zero acclimatisation. Meaning it's just as hot at night as it is during the day. Britons aren't physiologically or culturally used to sustained heat. We're properly white! So, a sudden jump from typical UK summer temps feels extreme, and the body struggles more without gradual adaptation. Heatwaves often bring "tropical nights" (temps staying above 20 °C), so homes don't cool down overnight. You can't sleep, recover, or anything which just compounds fatigue, dehydration, etc. Drier US heat often cools significantly at night. That is all topped up with the fact that we have longer summer daylight at the UK's higher latitude meaning more hours of solar heating. Hope this long explanation that no one wanted clears this right up...

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Florida Coasters
Florida Coasters@FL_Coasters·
@clebyherris The road trip I did out west in a rental SUV was just less stressful basically always being able to get gas and not needing to follow a strict “charging route”. And I was driving practically in the middle of nowhere Arizona/Utah most of the time.
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Florida Coasters
Florida Coasters@FL_Coasters·
@clebyherris I have a Tesla that I’ve done multiple road trips with and my next car probably won’t be an EV. Gas/hybrid is just more practical for road trips still. Plus I’ve had some experiences where the chargers are full and with no queuing system, it can get messy.
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ClebyHerris
ClebyHerris@clebyherris·
90% of thoosies are not average americans
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Florida Coasters
Florida Coasters@FL_Coasters·
@mary_poppi23331 @kbrewFL I live 2 miles from the Gulf of Mexico, and even here humidity always goes down mid day. That screenshot is from where I live and you would see a similar dip anywhere in the UK
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Florida Coasters
Florida Coasters@FL_Coasters·
@GroggsDavidOWL No there’s plenty of people complaining over there it’s half the posts I see at this point
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Florida Coasters
Florida Coasters@FL_Coasters·
My whole timeline is now Brits complaining about the heat and saying it is worse there than anywhere else lol Also I’ve heard “it went from 10c to 30c” like that doesn’t happen literally everywhere else. When I lived in Indiana sometimes it would go from 80 to 40 as a high
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Florida Coasters
Florida Coasters@FL_Coasters·
@backward5boB @kbrewFL I visited relatives in the Midwest in July once when their AC was out and it was in the 90s inside. Uncomfortable but I survived
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Backward boB
Backward boB@backward5boB·
@FL_Coasters @kbrewFL Dude, it's 88 degrees in my apartment right now and it won't drop below 80 degrees before getting hotter again.
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