No.
100°C in the Sauna: not dead.
Finish sauna: 120°C. They even say it's healthy, while beating you with birch twigs afterwards.
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No.
100°C in the Sauna: not dead.
Finish sauna: 120°C. They even say it's healthy, while beating you with birch twigs afterwards.
Nah Finnish sauna doesn't really get that hot, 80-100°C usually.
World Sauna Championships had the sauna warmed up to 110°C
Eh. Please let me exaggerate in peace here. :)
(You might be right, though. )
Fine.
100°C is not death.
Source: I'm a Finn.
*adds new steam
Fahrenheit: unfathomably cold outside to really hot outside.
Celsius: Really cold outside to "ready to make tea".
Kelvin: "No.
to okay maybe a little."
Fahrenheit is basically asking humans how hot it feels.
Celsius is basically asking water how hot it feels.
Kelvin is basically asking atoms how hot it feels.
Fahrenheit is "how hot is it in a scale from horse piss to rat dick?". Arbitrary scale based on nothing
As an American, my favorite temperature is lukewarm paint
That’s such an ignorant statement.
It was based on human perception of temperature.
0 being the coldest day measured and 100 the hottest. (As tested by other means)
It’s a scale based on human perception and works with whole numbers, still.
A fever of 100 vs 101 as opposed to a fever of 37.78 vs 38.3. (No, these are not fever thresholds, I’m using whole numbers as an example. Yes Fahrenheit also uses decimals. My point is graduation of measure)
Metric & SI units may be better but you’re still wrong.
According to Wikipedia Fahrenheit is not based on that, but on the freezing point of brine (0 degrees F) and an approximation of average human body temperature (100 degrees F).
That's such a stupid statement.
Also as someone mentioned below, it has nothing to do with hottest/coldest day recorded (Though that would be even worse)
Several accounts of how he originally defined his scale exist, but the original paper suggests the lower defining point, 0 °F, was established as the freezing temperature of a solution of brine made from a mixture of water, ice, and ammonium chloride (a salt). The other limit established was his best estimate of the average human body temperature, originally set at 90 °F, then 96 °F (about 2.6 °F less than the modern value due to a later redefinition of the scale).
Thus, fahrenheit is the most useful scale for humans.