Today has been relatively warm, but it's raining. Which is kind of a common thing in the middle Atlantic or eastern united states. I went for a walk this morning and it started to rain - not really what I was hoping for as it was set yesterday to not start until midnight tonight.
40F here at the moment (that's probably about 5 by queen's temperature rules).
midnight tonight - projected to be 37F. Strangely, not much decline in temps.
tomorrow afternoon, I planned to maybe do some chisel making with the doors open in the garage. by 4PM 2F ( -17 queen's rules) with 25-35mph winds and gusts to 50
when grinding metal, you can always have bare hands on something warm, and my doors don't face the wind direction from the west, so it's still not that far outside of the realm of possibility. But, I do also have glue and some WB finishes and paint in the shop, so I guess discretion on those potentially getting below 32F says keep the doors closed.
>you can always have bare hands on something warm< I should explain that - if you're handling something that is relatively warm and it doesn't get cold as it's on and off of the grinding wheel, you can wear no coat and grind in 20F temperatures and not feel cold. Having something warm your hands consistently is almost like magic in cold temps.
40F here at the moment (that's probably about 5 by queen's temperature rules).
midnight tonight - projected to be 37F. Strangely, not much decline in temps.
tomorrow afternoon, I planned to maybe do some chisel making with the doors open in the garage. by 4PM 2F ( -17 queen's rules) with 25-35mph winds and gusts to 50
when grinding metal, you can always have bare hands on something warm, and my doors don't face the wind direction from the west, so it's still not that far outside of the realm of possibility. But, I do also have glue and some WB finishes and paint in the shop, so I guess discretion on those potentially getting below 32F says keep the doors closed.
>you can always have bare hands on something warm< I should explain that - if you're handling something that is relatively warm and it doesn't get cold as it's on and off of the grinding wheel, you can wear no coat and grind in 20F temperatures and not feel cold. Having something warm your hands consistently is almost like magic in cold temps.