• DontMakeItTim@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    You can think of F as a “% hot” measurement for weather.

    0 = no heat: getting dangerously cold for humans. 50 = half hot, half cold: wear long pants and a jacket. 75 = three quarters hot, getting close to t shirt weather. 100= fully hot: getting dangerous for humans.

    Yes you can go over or under, but you can consider those to be extreme weather (120% hot!)

      • harmonea@kbin.social
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        1 year ago

        Acclimatization is a whole thing. I remember thinking 65F / 18C was cold once upon a time, then I moved north and now only bother putting on a jacket if it’s below 40F / 5C or so (but now I start seriously suffering above 85F / 30 C where that used to be my ideal temp).

        People who pretend certain temps are objectively not that cold or hot have never moved from one climate to another, I think. The person you replied to must be from a hot area.

      • lolcatnip@reddthat.com
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        1 year ago

        It really depends on what your body is acclimated to. When I lived in Texas it felt a little too cool to be t-shirt weather. Now that I’ve been living in Seattle for years, it’s safely within the realm of t-shirt weather.

    • wieson@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      Sorry but that makes no sense to me.

      Is 0% hot no extra heat, like perfect room temp or is it zero heat, the death of all life?

      What does 100% hot mean?

      You arranged it for yourself to make sense of it, but no need to rationalise it. It’s only good, cause you’re used to it, or doesn’t “feel more human” than Celsius.

      I’ve been in a sauna with 100°C ( what’s that? 250°F?) It’s doable, but that’s probably my personal max. So 100°C air temp is now 100%? Mmmh doesn’t really work that great.

      All in all, temperature unit is just data points, the interpretation is individual. Fahrenheit is not “more suitable for humans” than any other unit.