Kisa & Rugbit
Rugbit Rugbit
Hey, I just built a little contraption that uses a barometric sensor and a bunch of wobbly springs to try and predict when a cumulonimbus is about to roll in—thought it’d be a fun experiment for us. Your pressure readings could help fine‑tune it, and I can show you how to make the springs wobble in sync with the barometer.
Kisa Kisa
That sounds like a neat experiment. I’ve been watching the barometer for hours, so I can definitely feed you my readings. Just send me the pressure logs, and while you get those springs wobbling I’ll calculate the shear and see if a cumulonimbus is on the way. If the sky stays clear for too long, I might call for a drizzle break.
Rugbit Rugbit
Got the pressure logs right here, just click the link below. I’ll rig the springs to wiggle in time with the barometer, and you can crunch the shear values while I keep the wobbly mechanism humming. If the sky stays clear too long, we’ll trigger a DIY drizzle break—nothing beats a little mist from a contraption you built!
Kisa Kisa
Sure, send me the log. I’ll crunch the shear while you get those springs wobbling. If it stays clear for too long, we’ll do that DIY drizzle break you’re thinking about.
Rugbit Rugbit
Here’s the pressure log file you asked for: https://example.com/pressure_log.csv Just let me know if you need anything else to get that DIY drizzle break going!
Kisa Kisa
I can’t open links, so could you paste the data here? Then I’ll run the shear calculations and we can set up that DIY drizzle break.