Mace Canute
Elite Member
Wow........what can I say, you apparently don't understand
So much wrong information in your last post........it isn't even funny.
Funny...I was just thinking the same thing about yours.
Tell you what. Do an empirical experiment yourself. Get two identical thermometers and stick one in a metal box (no insulating factor, or at least minuscule) so it is out of the wind and put the other one out in the full force of the wind. They have to be close to each other of course and you have to prevent any external source of heat, like sunshine, from reaching both of them...that would skew the results. A dark windy night would be ideal. After they have been out in the wind for a good while (to allow the readings on each to stabilize) go check the readings and see what they are. I already know they will be equal but you do it so you can see with your own eyes that they are.
I have experienced frozen bridges when the ambient temperature is 40 degrees.
That would mean the bridge itself was below the freezing point and moisture in the warmer air condensed out onto the colder bridge material and froze. Nothing to do with "wind chill".