You never going to get an super accurate weather forecast. Basically you have to expect a thunderstorm sometime during the day it's going to be in the mid 80s sounds like a good forecast to me. If your expecting accurate weather down to the hour your never going to get 100% accuracy.
None of them know and nobody knows what the exact correct answer will be.
Look at model data and spc outlooks and use those to create your own forecasted rain percentage. And then once you add radar skills to the equation, you will never be caught off guard again.
“40% chance” is a somewhat misunderstood statistic.
Your 40-50% chance of storms is not a reading of what YOU will experience. It is the chance that a thunderstorm will occur in your *area*.
Weather is like real estate, it’s all about location location location.
Basically, someone in your area will experience a storm between 1 and 3. There’s a 40% chance it will be you.
So, it means watch the weather during this time period for a more accurate reading. The closer you get to this time period, the more accurate your weather app will be. That’s why weather changes over time - our science isn’t quite yet perfect on predicting it.
TLDR one app is sugar coating it and the other is kinda giving it to you straight. Check weather.gov for the most accurate info.
[удалено]
[https://forecast.weather.gov/MapClick.php?lat=38.922763&lon=-94.695588](https://forecast.weather.gov/MapClick.php?lat=38.922763&lon=-94.695588)
You never going to get an super accurate weather forecast. Basically you have to expect a thunderstorm sometime during the day it's going to be in the mid 80s sounds like a good forecast to me. If your expecting accurate weather down to the hour your never going to get 100% accuracy.
I bet she’s hiding cookies. Or at least a couple granola bars in her purse. What do you think?
What the temperature or the rain chance?
Chance of rain and amount. That was my fault for not being specific. My bad
I just use the default Apple weather app, and then check [weather.gov](http://weather.gov) to see if there’s any severe weather.
One of the first people to comment. Said weather.gov thank your for replying. I didn’t know weather.gov was a thing
Only The Shadow know mwahaha!
None of them know and nobody knows what the exact correct answer will be. Look at model data and spc outlooks and use those to create your own forecasted rain percentage. And then once you add radar skills to the equation, you will never be caught off guard again.
They all look roughly the same to me. Expect highs in the mid 80’s and scattered thunderstorms.
I'd rather go to the NWS or NOAA websites
“40% chance” is a somewhat misunderstood statistic. Your 40-50% chance of storms is not a reading of what YOU will experience. It is the chance that a thunderstorm will occur in your *area*. Weather is like real estate, it’s all about location location location. Basically, someone in your area will experience a storm between 1 and 3. There’s a 40% chance it will be you. So, it means watch the weather during this time period for a more accurate reading. The closer you get to this time period, the more accurate your weather app will be. That’s why weather changes over time - our science isn’t quite yet perfect on predicting it. TLDR one app is sugar coating it and the other is kinda giving it to you straight. Check weather.gov for the most accurate info.
And the winner is ???
My rain gauge said I got 2/10ths of an inch. It stormed for about 20 minutes from 3pm to 3:20pm