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ties. There are times, however, when conventional weather reports are
unavailable or not completely accurate for the current conditions at
your
specific location. This is especially true in remote areas, far from
news or government weather broadcasts.
When you can not get a professional forecast, you need to watch the sky
and interpret the signs based on your woodsman or mariner skills. The
recording barometer in your GPS unit can sharpen your weather skills
by tracking changes in barometric pressure at your location. It will tell
you if local atmospheric pressure is steady, rising or falling — and how
fast. Knowing this
pressure history
— and how to interpret it — will
make you a better forecaster. Here is how it works:
A barometer measures air pressure in the atmosphere. Most U.S.
weather reports list barometric pressure in inches, which is based on
the height of a column of mercury in a commercial barometer. Chang-
ing air pressure changes the height of the mercury.
Your Explorer has a digital barometer that records air pressure in mil-
libars. Bar is the metric pressure equivalent of pounds per square inch,
and a millibar is 1/1000 of one bar. For example, a barometric reading
of 29.82 inches is equal to 1,009.1 mb. The unit of measure is not par-
ticularly important here…the critical factor is determining the trend,
whether the air pressure is steady, rising or falling over time.
A larger number means higher pressure; a lower number means lower
pressure. When barometric pressure is higher than average, good
weather is expected. Low pressure indicates clouds and precipitation.
The relative change in pressure over time is an indication of a future
change in weather.
This is feasible because a change in air pressure al-
ways occurs ahead of a change in weather conditions. A pressure
change during an interval of about two to three hours is the best indica-
tor for a weather forecast.
Interpreting Weather Information
The iFINDER Explorer's Weather Prediction utility is found in two
data boxes on the Digital Data page. (This page is only available in Ad-
vanced Mode.) The Pressure History box at the top has a bar chart.
Each bar represents a past hourly pressure reading (up to 23 hours
old), plus the current reading. The Weather Symbol box at lower left
reflects the current trend shown in the Pressure History bar chart.
Summary of Contents for iFINDER Explorer
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