zachelliott
The Stig's Missourian Cousin
zachelliott

Yea it's all RF stickers now. My Ex had the old brick and it was pretty nice, they had one pike-pass they shared through everyone in their family, just transferred them between cars. Now you can't do that :( It's also annoying because we lost our windshield in a hail storm about a month back (yes it was intentional,

I worked as a Valet for a summer between my Freshman and Sophomore year of College because it was good money ($12-13 an hour on average, much better than any other job I could have got in the area) but it was at a small Indian Casino. We didn't have a parking structure, but just about ~200 parking spaces that were

I was pleasantly surprised when I moved down here and saw how the PikePass system works. Back in Kansas, if you have the K-Tag (Their version of the PikePass) you still have to slow down to go through a gate. So the only time it saves you is not having to dig out your wallet. Here in OK though, you drive right through

Definitely a location thing. I worked at a small town NAPA store in High School and I was one of 3 employees, one of which had owned the store for 30 years. I knew quite a bit about parts and auto systems but the two old guys who worked there knew more than I could ever imagine knowing. There's a second parts store

These storms won't be effecting Norman, they'll be moving to the NE out into SE Oklahoma, once this last line passes through Norman we may have off and on storms, but it's not going to be anything like Dallas.

Yep that's what I pulled down, except I had a few other stations in there, not sure what options we clicked differently. The NCDC is a fantastic source for anything weather related archived. I've used it a ton for archived Radar images, i've got 1GB+ of past radar saved on my computer for various case studies i've

I'm not familiar with the dynamics of the CA Coast (I'm in Oklahoma). If it were just in Oakland, one could infer maybe the fires were contributing to the temperature observations, but my guess is a storm system moved in off the coast into the area. Unfortunately I can't find archived surface observation maps, just

I had another comment on here, but I found out I was using data from Livermore, which is outside of the San Fran Metro. Here's data from Oakland that may be a bit more useful. Again, found using the NCDC, and only took about 20 minutes.

Found using NCDC (National Climatic Data Center) took me about 20 minutes and here is the result:

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