• @CptOblivius
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    6311 months ago

    The fun part of North dakota is the extremes. The record low (without wind chill) is -60 F, the record high is 122 F. That is a 182 degree spread, or 100 C spread for the rest of the world.

    • @AlternatePersonMan
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      2311 months ago

      I often wonder how much money Northern states would save on roads if it weren’t for the extreme temperature swings.

      Regularly hit highs over 100 in the summer, lows below -30 in the winter. That’s an awful lot of compression and expansion. Not to mention the abuse of heavy plows and their blades catching upheaved concrete.

      • @[email protected]
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        1811 months ago

        Should also mention the just, massive amount of salt dumped on them every year. Salt just ruins everything it touches.

        • @abrake
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          3311 months ago

          Except french fries

        • @[email protected]
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          11 months ago

          It’s actually too cold for salt to be reliable. Water fully saturated with salt freezes at ~-21/-6(c/f), so if it’s predictably getting colder than that, it’s a bad idea to use salt.

          Edit: They add beet juice when it’s really cold, but otherwise, it looks like they use salt :(

          • @RedAggroBest
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            211 months ago

            It’s salt but it’s not sodium cloride. It’s usually calcium cloride. That’s usually good to -30/-34 F/C.

            • @[email protected]
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              111 months ago

              Interesting, I haven’t found anything to support that (but it’s weirdly difficult to research, so it could just be DDG not understanding what I’m looking for), do you have a source for that?

              I found halite (unrefined sodium chloride) as the primary type of rock salt in the US. Wikipedia lists beer, molasses, and beet juice as possible alternatives for roads or glycol and sugar for airlines.

              The EPA does list CaCl as an option, but notes that it’s both better for the environment and more expensive, so it’s reserved for vulnerable areas. I found this which doesn’t specify which they use, but gives an effective temperature range that sounds like NaCl for North Dakota.

        • @[email protected]
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          511 months ago

          I lived in North Dakota for almost 5 years, they dont use salt. Just a sand/dirt mix. Things get really nasty in the spring/early summer when it all starts melting. They were trying out a weird chemical mix when we moved away, i want to say some glycol something or other? It was actually pretty slimy but way better than ice.

          • @kalkulat
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            11 months ago

            I lived there for 11 years… don’t remember much, except when the blizzard turned the road into a skating rink, and the wind (which you could actually see) pushed me across the highway into a ditch. Every morning for weeks, I had to plow through the snow-drifts every 100 feet of the gravel road to get to that highway.

            Oh yeah, and that big buffalo statue, and that world’s tallest tower.

            But I did get a lot of Sci-fi read during the slow season. Those Minot airmen sentenced to the AFB did leave behind a lot of good SF books.

        • @[email protected]
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          11 months ago

          Many places have switched to a brine which uses a waste byproduct from cheese production. This greatly reduces how much salt is thrown onto the roads and also makes use of literal waste

          Edit: looks like there’s a few different mixtures but here’s the cheese brine from Wisconsin

        • @Tenderloins
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          111 months ago

          When it gets that cold salt is useless, so thankfully we see much less of it throughout the winter. Sand is used instead. -20C and salt sort of stops working.

      • @ChillPenguin
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        211 months ago

        It’s wonder our roads look like they were shelled once spring rolls around. Last year was particularly bad, I don’t think the roads were in decent shape until the end of the summer. At least near Minneapolis.