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Eclipse -- Ten Minutes to Totality!
Or near totality. I think I get 99.5% from my office. Traffic was supposed to be horrible this morning with last-minute gawkers heading south to total totality, but there was nobody on the road. It was great.
I'm going to go look at the sun and go blind because that's what they say you should do. I have the special glasses, but they don't look good on me. -- Jay Beattie. |
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#2
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Eclipse -- Ten Minutes to Totality!
On Monday, August 21, 2017 at 12:02:55 PM UTC-5, jbeattie wrote:
Or near totality. I think I get 99.5% from my office. Traffic was supposed to be horrible this morning with last-minute gawkers heading south to total totality, but there was nobody on the road. It was great. I'm going to go look at the sun and go blind because that's what they say you should do. I have the special glasses, but they don't look good on me. -- Jay Beattie. Its about 40 minutes until my eclipse. Middle of the country. I'm off the main path. But its raining here. Cloudy of course. The eclipse is going to be "fake news" for me. |
#3
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Eclipse -- Ten Minutes to Totality!
On 2017-08-21 10:02, jbeattie wrote:
Or near totality. I think I get 99.5% from my office. Traffic was supposed to be horrible this morning with last-minute gawkers heading south to total totality, but there was nobody on the road. It was great. I'm going to go look at the sun and go blind because that's what they say you should do. I have the special glasses, but they don't look good on me. We used the electric welding visor but the eclipse was less than impressive east of Sacramento. The TV is still running a big rah-rah show about it. Oh well. I guess the eclipse glasses scalper price ($250 was reported once) will now drop to $0.10 or so. -- Regards, Joerg http://www.analogconsultants.com/ |
#4
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Eclipse -- Ten Minutes to Totality!
On 8/21/2017 10:02 AM, jbeattie wrote:
Or near totality. I think I get 99.5% from my office. Traffic was supposed to be horrible this morning with last-minute gawkers heading south to total totality, but there was nobody on the road. It was great. I'm going to go look at the sun and go blind because that's what they say you should do. I have the special glasses, but they don't look good on me. -- Jay Beattie. Down here in Salem totality land, it was pretty cool looking at that big black dot in the sky with the bright edges. You could see tiny red/orange flashes around the edges, even with the naked eye, though better with binoculars. Solar flares I presume. That 2-ish minutes passed very quickly. The family made noise and scared away the cosmic goat that was eating the sun. You can thank me by sending contributions to my bike parts fund. Now ODOT's website shows stop-and-go traffic on I-5 for 30 miles in either direction leaving Salem. Back to our regularly scheduled program. Mark J. |
#5
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Eclipse -- Ten Minutes to Totality!
On Monday, August 21, 2017 at 12:25:00 PM UTC-7, Mark J. wrote:
On 8/21/2017 10:02 AM, jbeattie wrote: Or near totality. I think I get 99.5% from my office. Traffic was supposed to be horrible this morning with last-minute gawkers heading south to total totality, but there was nobody on the road. It was great. I'm going to go look at the sun and go blind because that's what they say you should do. I have the special glasses, but they don't look good on me. -- Jay Beattie. Down here in Salem totality land, it was pretty cool looking at that big black dot in the sky with the bright edges. You could see tiny red/orange flashes around the edges, even with the naked eye, though better with binoculars. Solar flares I presume. That 2-ish minutes passed very quickly. The family made noise and scared away the cosmic goat that was eating the sun. You can thank me by sending contributions to my bike parts fund.. Now ODOT's website shows stop-and-go traffic on I-5 for 30 miles in either direction leaving Salem. Back to our regularly scheduled program. You guys got more of a total eclipse, although even in PDX, it got pretty dark. The automatic street lights switched on, and from my building, you could see lights twinkling off to the east -- darker than dusk, but not totally dark by any means. I'd use my 3,000 lumen light for riding in that 40 second partial black-out, just to be extra sure. Traffic is still light here. -- Jay Beattie. |
#6
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Eclipse -- Ten Minutes to Totality!
Well: We drove many hours south to visit and stay with friends about 90 minutes
north of the path of totality. At their place, I spent much time researching weather forecasts and clear sky forecasts to decide whether to head due south or more southwest for the best shot at a clear sky. Ultimately the forecast was pretty good, less than 5% chance of rain, and sky about 30% cloudy. Based on all that, we ended up in a tiny southern town's park with perhaps 300 other sky gazers. But on the way, driving in long lines of traffic, we were more and more worried about the patches of cumulus clouds. In the park, the big clouds would come and go, but were mostly absent. As totality got closer and closer, the sky looked fine except for one big cloud. We got to see the moon obscure more and more of the sun's disk. We looked through one guy's telescope (with filter) to see the moon obscuring well over half the sun, and saw a few sunspots too. Then we got to what must have been 95%, 98%, maybe 99% - and that big dark cloud moved right in front of the sun! I could see sunbeams spraying just a little east, so with maybe a couple minutes left until totality, I said "We have nothing to lose" and we jumped in the car and drove east. Within a very short time, the sun was clear of the cloud - but totality was over. we saw the super-thin crescent that was uncovered as the moon moved on its way. So we saw everything but the moment of totality. :-/ Bad astronomical karma? - Frank Krygowski |
#7
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Eclipse -- Ten Minutes to Totality!
On Mon, 21 Aug 2017 10:37:51 -0700, Joerg
wrote: We used the electric welding visor but the eclipse was less than impressive east of Sacramento. The TV is still running a big rah-rah show about it. Oh well. Cloudy and some fog in Santa Cruz CA. Very disappointing. A few of the locals drove about 40 miles north to the hills above the Santa Clara Valley for a clear sky. 2hrs after it was all over, the clouds cleared enough to actually see the sun. I guess the eclipse glasses scalper price ($250 was reported once) will now drop to $0.10 or so. Only $250? Try out these prices instead: https://www.ebay.com/sch/i.html?_from=R40&_sacat=0&LH_BIN=1&_nkw=eclipse+gl asses&LH_PrefLoc=1&_sop=16 The high price winner is $13,892.66 to pay off a student loan. If I check "sold listings" there were actually some people who supposedly paid those prices: https://www.ebay.com/sch/i.html?LH_Complete=1&LH_Sold=1&_nkw=eclipse+glasse s&_sop=16 Next total eclipse will be April 8, 2024. Mark your calendars. https://www.greatamericaneclipse.com/future/ -- Jeff Liebermann 150 Felker St #D http://www.LearnByDestroying.com Santa Cruz CA 95060 http://802.11junk.com Skype: JeffLiebermann AE6KS 831-336-2558 |
#8
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Eclipse -- Ten Minutes to Totality!
Frank Krygowski wrote:
Well: We drove many hours south to visit and stay with friends about 90 minutes north of the path of totality. At their place, I spent much time researching weather forecasts and clear sky forecasts to decide whether to head due south or more southwest for the best shot at a clear sky. Ultimately the forecast was pretty good, less than 5% chance of rain, and sky about 30% cloudy. Based on all that, we ended up in a tiny southern town's park with perhaps 300 other sky gazers. But on the way, driving in long lines of traffic, we were more and more worried about the patches of cumulus clouds. In the park, the big clouds would come and go, but were mostly absent. As totality got closer and closer, the sky looked fine except for one big cloud. We got to see the moon obscure more and more of the sun's disk. We looked through one guy's telescope (with filter) to see the moon obscuring well over half the sun, and saw a few sunspots too. Then we got to what must have been 95%, 98%, maybe 99% - and that big dark cloud moved right in front of the sun! I could see sunbeams spraying just a little east, so with maybe a couple minutes left until totality, I said "We have nothing to lose" and we jumped in the car and drove east. Within a very short time, the sun was clear of the cloud - but totality was over. we saw the super-thin crescent that was uncovered as the moon moved on its way. So we saw everything but the moment of totality. :-/ Bad astronomical karma? - Frank Krygowski We were scheduled to get 88% coverage, but we spent the time parenting instead, as our kid was scheduled to get their wisdom teeth pulled at the same time as the eclipse. |
#9
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Eclipse -- Ten Minutes to Totality!
On Monday, August 21, 2017 at 1:37:38 PM UTC-4, Joerg wrote:
Snipped We used the electric welding visor but the eclipse was less than impressive east of Sacramento. The TV is still running a big rah-rah show about it. Oh well. I guess the eclipse glasses scalper price ($250 was reported once) will now drop to $0.10 or so. -- Regards, Joerg http://www.analogconsultants.com/ I read about using welgding goggles or welding face shield to view the eclipse aa it occurred and was warned NOT to do it unless under normal light everything you looked at was very dark = that is other objects. Normal welding gear was NOT considered safe for viewing the eclipse EXCEPT for the total eclipse portion. I hope your welding stuff was the really dark stuff. I guess it was otherwise you'd not be able to see the keyboard any more. Cheers |
#10
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Eclipse -- Ten Minutes to Totality!
On Mon, 21 Aug 2017 20:15:02 -0700 (PDT), Sir Ridesalot
wrote: On Monday, August 21, 2017 at 1:37:38 PM UTC-4, Joerg wrote: Snipped We used the electric welding visor but the eclipse was less than impressive east of Sacramento. The TV is still running a big rah-rah show about it. Oh well. I guess the eclipse glasses scalper price ($250 was reported once) will now drop to $0.10 or so. -- Regards, Joerg http://www.analogconsultants.com/ I read about using welgding goggles or welding face shield to view the eclipse aa it occurred and was warned NOT to do it unless under normal light everything you looked at was very dark = that is other objects. Normal welding gear was NOT considered safe for viewing the eclipse EXCEPT for the total eclipse portion. I hope your welding stuff was the really dark stuff. I guess it was otherwise you'd not be able to see the keyboard any more. Cheers The guys on another group discussed that, for days, in excruciating detail. I believe that the consensus was a number 11 lens was too light and that either #12 or #14 should work. After it was over it turned out that one guy's kid had watched it with a #10 lens as the #11 had been too dark. I suspect that location and cloud cover probably made a big difference. -- Cheers, John B. |
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