Once again, There seems to be a difference between "con" trails, and "chem"
trails, which perhaps your friend missed. . . . . . .



Sparrow
-----Original Message-----
From: Gordon Brownlie <[email protected]>
To: [email protected] <[email protected]>
Date: Wednesday, July 14, 1999 5:56 AM
Subject: Re: CS>Chem Trails


>Asked a mate of mine- an ex RAAF officer  His reply was:
>
>Thanks for the enlightenment on "Chem Trails" in that URL you sent.  Mate
>the whole thing is a load of rubbish - the length of time that a con trail
>will take to dissipate or spread is entirely dependent on the prevailing
>wind speed and direction, and the temperature at the 'con trail' altitude.
>The heights at which they form is also temperature and relative humidity
>dependent and can vary from sea level to 60,000 feet.  Clouds - for
example;
>your car engine on a cold morning at sea level.  I think the URL was put
>together by someone using very little knowledge of meteorology trying to
put
>the wind up someone with even less knowledge.  It did however make
>interesting reading. I have personally seen 'con trails' form in the
tropics
>at 50,000 feet and at 15000 feet in Southern Australia in winter when we
get
>a cold moist southerly breeze.  I have seen them last from a few seconds to
>7-8 hours when the air is still or very light wind conditions.  Also they
>are not caused by "ice crystals" but share the same formation
>characteristics as clouds - warm air encountering cool moist air will
always
>condense and form.
>For your info
>Good Health
>Gordon



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