31 mpg!!
ORIGINAL: bksram3500
I hate to tell you this Jake and Frog but I haven't been running my A/C that much in Portland or Seattle. I have actually ran my heater a couple mournings.
I hate to tell you this Jake and Frog but I haven't been running my A/C that much in Portland or Seattle. I have actually ran my heater a couple mournings.

ORIGINAL: lilfroger
Your sick man - - out out you warm blooded heat lover - - you are now banished from the Pacific Northwest 
ORIGINAL: bksram3500
I hate to tell you this Jake and Frog but I haven't been running my A/C that much in Portland or Seattle. I have actually ran my heater a couple mournings.
I hate to tell you this Jake and Frog but I haven't been running my A/C that much in Portland or Seattle. I have actually ran my heater a couple mournings.

ORIGINAL: bksram3500
The engineers will not let me go home until at least the 7th of august. Which sucks because my 22nd birthday and 2nd anniversary is on the 5th
The engineers will not let me go home until at least the 7th of august. Which sucks because my 22nd birthday and 2nd anniversary is on the 5th
But may I make a suggestion on where you and Jake should go:
http://maps.google.com/maps?f=q&hl=e...;z=14&om=1
My in-laws live just outside of Yuma and they normally don't turn on their AC until it gets 95 degrees or 90 if in the car. One other thing about southwest AZ is that the humidity is very, very low and it’s dry heat. So the other day before my in-laws left N. IA an went back to Yuma, the temp had only reached 80 at noon, the dew point was 75 and humidity was only 63%. Anyway they thought it was as bad or worse then the 110-degree heat back in Yuma, AZ. So you can see how humidity and dew point can play a big roll in how a person feels at lower temps with high humidity and dew point when compared to places have that have higher temps but also have very low humidity an dew points.







