To: rktman
In air cooling? Do they mean air conditioning? Because there isn’t much need for air conditioning in Great Britain... ever?
7 posted on
03/15/2020 9:11:13 AM PDT by
PilotDave
(No, really, you just can't make this stuff up!!)
To: PilotDave
Oh yeah there is. I’ve been there wishing for some good old fashioned ‘Murican AC before.
9 posted on
03/15/2020 9:23:24 AM PDT by
rktman
( #My2ndAmend! ----- Enlisted in the Navy in '67 to protect folks rights to strip my rights. WTH?)
To: PilotDave
I wondered the same thing. London does not strike me as being a particularly hot place. In fact, these are the average summer high/low temperatures in London (yes, this is Fahrenheit):
June 70° / 56°
July 74° / 59°
August 73° / 59°
People in places like Savannah, GA or Dallas, TX would be freezing under these summer time temperatures.
12 posted on
03/15/2020 9:34:53 AM PDT by
SamAdams76
(Trump (859); Slow Joe (527); Commie (476); Fake Indian (48); Drunken Weld (1))
To: PilotDave
Do they mean air conditioning? Because there isnt much need for air conditioning in Great Britain... ever? The U.K. has a humidity problem that proper air conditioning helps keep outside, where it belongs. Sadly, apart from some newer office buildings, high-end retail shops and fancy hotels, few locations there do A/C as God and Willis Carrier intended.
Of course, the French are right across the Channel, making the Brits look like titans of indoor climate control.
17 posted on
03/15/2020 11:40:57 AM PDT by
Charles Martel
(Progressives are the crab grass in the lawn of life.)
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