Kabal & FrostVein
Kabal Kabal
We’re planning a winter sortie and any unexpected temperature dip could cripple the operation. What does your latest model say about the ridge’s thermal profile?
FrostVein FrostVein
The latest run on the old VR model still matches the raw data. At the ridge line the mean temperature stays above 0°C most of the day, with a small dip of about 3 °C around noon when the sun is low. But every 200 m up, you can expect a drop to –2 °C in the early morning, and the model flags that anomaly as likely. Keep that window in mind.
Kabal Kabal
Got it. So at the ridge we’re safe for the day, but those early‑morning 200‑m climbs could be below freezing. Plan gear changes and brief the team on that cold window, keep the ascent short and keep the heat sources ready. No surprises.
FrostVein FrostVein
Sounds good. Make sure the gear list includes high‑grade parka layers for that 200‑m band. Brief the team on the 3 °C dip window, keep the ascent under an hour, and position the heat sources near the ridge entrance. No surprises, just data.
Kabal Kabal
Gear list updated: high‑grade parkas, thermal layers, insulated gloves. Team briefed on the 3 °C dip window, ascent capped at an hour. Heat sources positioned at the ridge entrance, ready to deploy. No surprises.
FrostVein FrostVein
All set, data integrity confirmed. Keep the thermal layers close, watch the temperature log every 15 min, and remember: any unmodeled drop is a glitch in the system. Good luck.
Kabal Kabal
All right. Layers ready, log checkpoints set, glitch detection on. We'll move on with precision. Good luck.
FrostVein FrostVein
Good luck. Keep the logs tight, check the model every 15 minutes, and let the data speak.
Kabal Kabal
Thanks. Logs tight, checks every quarter‑hour, data first. Stay sharp.