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<blockquote data-quote="pickup" data-source="post: 1909075"><p>I never freeze in my tractor , I always check the weather forecast for the shift I am working and look at the lowest forecasted temperature and dress accordingly. If the temperature goes up from that (and I also know the forecasted high) , the layers start coming off . </p><p></p><p>I stay warm and I don't idle and I don't need to disconnect the ivis. </p><p></p><p>After doing this for years, I know exactly what I need to wear for any given temperature.. The weather forecasters have made it more difficult in the last few years by over emphasizing the "real feel" temperatures at the expense of telling me the actual forecasted temps. I don't care too much about wind chill when I am sitting in my tractor. </p><p></p><p>I work in NJ so we can have some cold winters, although I read that due to the el nino effect, that this winter may not be as harsh as some of the more recent ones.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="pickup, post: 1909075"] I never freeze in my tractor , I always check the weather forecast for the shift I am working and look at the lowest forecasted temperature and dress accordingly. If the temperature goes up from that (and I also know the forecasted high) , the layers start coming off . I stay warm and I don't idle and I don't need to disconnect the ivis. After doing this for years, I know exactly what I need to wear for any given temperature.. The weather forecasters have made it more difficult in the last few years by over emphasizing the "real feel" temperatures at the expense of telling me the actual forecasted temps. I don't care too much about wind chill when I am sitting in my tractor. I work in NJ so we can have some cold winters, although I read that due to the el nino effect, that this winter may not be as harsh as some of the more recent ones. [/QUOTE]
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