What Did You Do with Your 80 This Weekend? (22 Viewers)

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Other corner.

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I think our low last night was in the high 80's.

Humidity is bad, but when you get over 110° it doesn't matter. We actually are more humid than normal for this time of year.

When you combine 90°F - 110°F with 90% humidity you are just being cook .. ( on vapor )
 

Your fronts are wrong too. Driver's side is just barely staying up on the step, I'm not 100% sure but the PS looks like it is about 180 out. Can't tell about your DS rear.

There is an obvious step on the lower spring pads.. the end of the coil wire should butt up against that step.
 
When you combine 90°F - 110°F with 90% humidity you are just being cook .. ( on vapor )

I've worked in Houston in those conditions. It was easier for me than +110° here in AZ. It is different for everyone though. I don't miss the drenched with sweat. We get that in a few weeks.
 
I see most of you out west are missing out on the humidity, the thing that keeps it nice and hot and moist well into the dead of night. At least it cools off at night for you.:hmm::hmm:

100° at midnight is not cooling off
 
Humidity changes everything. Here in the Sacramento area we've been at 105~109º for the past few days but humidity is in the 20%-range. I would rather have high temps/low humidity than average temps/high humidity. That s*** is suffocating.
 
LOL. We hit 120 and everyone's disappointed we didn't break the 122 record. :cool:

Good ol' AZ. Was in Phoenix for work several years ago and it was like 110º by 8am. Never again.

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Love it when folks say, but it's a dry heat. My oven is a dry heat too. 121 at my house yesterday:mad:
 
That Pass. rear coil needs to be turned 180° clockwise.

Technically speaking, 180° rotation could be achieved by turning either clockwise OR counterclockwise. Just sayin'. LOL
 
True, but clockwise is easier, because we're in the Northern Hemisphere. :idea:

Actually things turn counter-clockwise in the northern hemisphere. Tornadoes, the water going down a drain, etc. all turn counter clockwise. I am a storm chaser and have seen tornadoes up close, they turn counter-clockwise (very rarely one will turn clockwise but it won't be in the main meso-cyclone but on the edge). Fill your sink with water and then pull the plug. The water will naturally turn counter-clockwise.
 
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In search of skiable lines above Laurel Lakes, High Sierra. Road is clear, and there's plenty of snow still at elevation.
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Actually things turn counter-clockwise in the northern hemisphere. Tornadoes, the water going down a drain, etc. all turn counter clockwise. I am a storm chaser and have seen tornadoes up close, they turn counter-clockwise (very rarely one will turn clockwise but it won't be in the main meso-cyclone but on the edge). Fill your sink with water and then pull the plug. The water will naturally turn counter-clockwise.
All in perspective. Lying on the ground looking up at a tornado, it would be turning clockwise. :flipoff2:
 

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