purdue1014
Pre-takeoff checklist
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Brent
I've heard reports of 3 tornado's confirmed on the ground....
Ok up here. Lots of lightening and and some strong winds.I've heard reports of 3 tornado's confirmed on the ground....
Tom Skilling says the Cumulonimbus towered up to 70,000 feet!
And the lightning is positive charged, which is the kind that causes fires. I was sure I'd have the 7th power outage of the year but not this time.
I can't believe Tom Skillethead is still on the air! What a WGN mainstay.
He's the highest paid Tribune company employee - even more than the CEO - well over $1M a year. He couldda just stole like his brother Jeff did.
I'm not familiar with that story - can you fill me in?
Yikes. I bet it sucked being around a news station during that time.little company called enron.
I think we were the only flight that left on time out of O'Hare today.
Not much was really mentioned about it except for one story in the Trib about how the whole Enron mess was affecting Tom and his family with his brother int he spotlight. Most of the story was not about his brother and his relationship and not whether he was guilty or innocent.Yikes. I bet it sucked being around a news station during that time.
You mean occasionally there is one??
I think I've been on about 17 flights this year (again this Thursday on UAL yet). Only two legs have taken off or landed on time. We've been put in the penalty box so many times for arriving late and having no gate that I can pretty well tell we're going there by the taxi routes we use!
In St Charles we had the high winds and lightning - lost power for about 2 minutes. The local high school had ALL their football equipment, including portable goal posts, wind up in the forest and it peeled the metal roof off the main building.
Not much was really mentioned about it except for one story in the Trib about how the whole Enron mess was affecting Tom and his family with his brother int he spotlight. Most of the story was not about his brother and his relationship and not whether he was guilty or innocent.
Tom Skilling is the weatherman's weatherman, from what I've heard. Maybe Scott D can confirm or deny.
We're alright. I was just about to leave work when the tornado warning came in and we headed down to the basement. Power flickered a couple of times, but never for more than 15 seconds. Leslie got the cat into the basement at home and huddled there, nervous, but safe. Her sister lost power for a while (in Chicago), but it's back on.
Last I heard was 200,000 in the city without power, and about 65,000 in the burbs. ComEd is saying a "multi-day restoration effort." Also, they're reporting one reported tornado, none confirmed at this time.
The view toward Elgin form my house was very interesting. The electrical transients on my phone line were very fun!I guess the worst went south of us, although they say there are lot up here without power.
Where you the guy who went sliding on the infield cover and got arrested?I was at Wrigley when the storm blew through...
LOL! No... Both "Elvis" and his buddy walked right past us though on their way to their slide to infamy.Where you the guy who went sliding on the infield cover and got arrested?
On the way to work this AM I encountered one stoplight without power and a bunch of trees down on the side of the road. Other than that, smooth sailing.I was worried about youse guys. They say some in your town got hit hard. It musta been the same line that hit Griffith, IN with a lotta damage.
I guess the worst went south of us, although they say there are lot up here without power.
There was a stoplight not working this morning in Carpentersville. A cop was putting down flares and had his squad in the middle of the road with the bubbles on, an unlicensed teenage driver smacked into him. The cop is alive but injured.On the way to work this AM I encountered one stoplight without power and a bunch of trees down on the side of the road. Other than that, smooth sailing.
... Then the sirens went off (a rare occurrence in the city proper) and some folks freaked out a little....]
Unfortunately its a much longer drive, and I couldn't move there with my employer being in the Chicago Loop!
Yeah, my boss was one of the people I was with and he was saying how he has "lived in the city for 32 years and the sirens have never -- oh $%@#!!!" It was really something.
Rare occurrence indeed!
I lived a block away down Addison Street (both sides) a good portion of my life and I don't think I can remember the sirens ever going off...maybe once when I was little.
Amtrak Milwaukee Airport - Union Station: 6:26AM - 7:57AM.
Amtrak Union Station - Milwaukee Airport: 5:08PM - 6:28PM.
That's a barely longer commute than when I used to take Metra from Libertyville.
But you're right driving would be brutal.
The only problem with that is Amtrak keeps canceling trains, while Metra adds them. An alternative is Metra from Kenosha, which would require a what, 20-30 minute rush-hour drive to the station from Milwaukee? Some commuters out by me do that every day thanks to our fine, fine roads.
I had a gal working with me about 20 years ago who took the train from Kenosha to downtown, then got on a U of C shuttle bus to Hyde Park on the South Side. That's a LONG trip!I've only taken the rush hour timeframe trains, and certainly they don't have the schedule Metra does - for example, miss the 5:08 PM out of Union Station and you're stuck on the 8:05 PM! And at $42 round trip, it's not cheap, but then neither is parking in the Loop.
But these trains have been jammed - to the point of SRO on certain days. I see some people doing this daily - that would be a rough way to live.
Amtrak starts at downtown Milwaukee, and then only stops at MKE, Sturtevant, WI (i.e. Racine), and Glenview. I would bet the Kenosha Metra would take longer with multiple stops.
I worked with a guy who drove from Valpo to somewhere on the south side and then metra to Union Station, walked over to Ogilive and grabbed another Metra to Arlington Park where he kept a beater car in the lot and then drove up to our offices in Libertyville (this was pre-purple Ketra line) and then did the reverse each and every day.I had a gal working with me about 20 years ago who took the train from Kenosha to downtown, then got on a U of C shuttle bus to Hyde Park on the South Side. That's a LONG trip!
That is good news. When I saw the report I was hopping that no news from Clow was good news.NWS confirmed that a tornado did touch down in Bolingbrook last night, about a mile from Clow Intl Airport (1C5; home base)! But airplanes are OK; a few in the outside tiedowns shifted a bit in their spots, but no other damage. Whew!
ComEd did say that it may take days for some power to be restored.My daughter lives in Logan Square, Chicago. The TV news said "If you live in Logan Square, take cover now!" and she and the BF did. They got through unscathed but lost power... and as of 6pm CDT tonight they were still without power. ComEd is not giving out estimates.
She and the BF are heading for a hotel tonight!
-Skip
ComEd did say that it may take days for some power to be restored.
Last I heard, ComEd is hoping to have all power restored by Friday. Maybe sooner, if the weather cooperates, and Tom Skilling indicates that it probably will!My daughter lives in Logan Square, Chicago. The TV news said "If you live in Logan Square, take cover now!" and she and the BF did. They got through unscathed but lost power... and as of 6pm CDT tonight they were still without power. ComEd is not giving out estimates.
She and the BF are heading for a hotel tonight!
-Skip
Over four hours, about a half-year's worth of lightning bolts bombarded the Chicago area, electrifying the night sky as trees were split, transformers were zapped and houses were set ablaze.
As work crews picked up Tuesday from the previous night's storms, meteorologists were assessing the staggering power of a historic thunderstorm.
Nearly 90,000 thunderbolts had hit northern Illinois, according to the National Lightning Detection Network. At the storms' peak, it was firing off more than 800 bolts per minute; and that only counts those that hit the ground.
"There was no precedent for this," said WGN meteorologist Tom Skilling. "In every way imaginable, that storm last night was in its own league."
....
Forecasters knew that the storms bearing down on northeast Illinois had the potential to be powerful and dangerous. One measure of severe weather—convective available potential energy, or CAPE—was showing readings six times higher than those of the usual conditions for strong thunderstorms.
...
Glenn Hubbard was assuring his wife that the storm roaring through their Carpentersville neighborhood would soon pass when lightning blasted three trees about 8:30 p.m. Monday and jumped to their ranch style home, starting a fire that rendered the home uninhabitable.
"It sounded like an explosion," Hubbard said. "Our son said he smelled smoke. I opened a bedroom door and flames just shot out from the ceiling. We just ran outside, barefoot. I'm still in shock."
While working a night shift at the Signature Lounge on the 96th floor of the John Hancock Center, manager James Kuehner said his co-workers and customers received a close-up view of the night's two lightning storms.
"You could tell when the building was getting hit, because everything was bright light and thunder at the same time," Kuehner said. "We knew it was more than just our basic summer thunderstorm. All of us have been through a ton of them, but last night's was nothing like we had ever experienced."
But despite the employees feeling nervous about the swaying building and the strikes of lightning, Kuehner said, the patrons of the lounge were unfazed.
"One guy was filming the bar glasses as they were moving back and forth with his videophone," Kuehner said. "They thought it was the greatest thing ever.
http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/local/chi-lightning-06-aug06,0,2543310.story
Ba-doom-tish!
No *charge* for the extra entertainment, tourist-dude.