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Data » Meteorological Data
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BEE-Line Software offers a variety of surface and upper air meteorological data format from which to choose.  If you find yourself needing a format that is not listed here, please feel free to contact us.  Our meteorologists have years of experience in processing many different met formats, and will be able to assist you in finding the right dataset for your needs.

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Surface Formats

         

Price

SAMSON (1990 and earlier) No Description Available   Call for pricing
HUSWO (1990 - 1996) No Description Available   Call for pricing
TD3280 This global data set contains hourly or 3-hourly surface weather observations that are measured primarily at major airports and military bases. Observations are made by trained personnel or automated equipment that has been tested by the controlling agency. The stations are usually fully instrumented and therefore record a complete range of meteorological parameters. It must be noted that NCDC has the observations from the time the station opened, but the NWS has the current data. Official surface weather observation standards can be found in the Federal Meteorological Handbook. The observations are generally recorded for the 24-hour period midnight to midnight.   Call for pricing
ISHD/TD3505 The Integrated Surface Database(ISD) is composed of worldwide surface weather observations from about 20,000 stations, collected and stored from sources such as the Automated Weather Network (AWN), the Global Telecommunications System (GTS), the Automated Surface Observing System (ASOS), and data keyed from paper forms. Most digital observations are decoded either at operational centers and forwarded to the Federal Climate Complex (FCC) in Asheville, NC, or decoded at the FCC. The US Air Force Combat Climatology Center (AFCCC), the National Climatic Data Center (NCDC), and the US Navy’s Fleet Numerical Meteorological and Oceanographical Command Detachment (FNMOD), make up the FCC in Asheville, NC. Each agency is responsible for data ingest, quality control, and customer support for surface climatological data. All data are now stored in a single ASCII format. The database is used in climatological applications by numerous DoD and civilian customers.   Call for pricing
     

Upper Air Formats

 

Price

TD6201 Data in this file are retained in chronological order by station. Each logical record contains one station's Upper Air (U/A) Observation (Rawinsonde, Radiosonde, or Pibal) for each specific Upper Air Sounding (normally 2 each day). The record consists of a control word, an identification portion, and a data portion. The control word is used by the computer operating system for record length determination. For many systems this control word is transparent to the "users" program. The identification portion identifies the observing station, latitude, longitude, day and time (of release), and the number of repeating groups to follow. The data portion contains the U/A meteorological values and the quality control flag fields for each level. The data portion repeats for each level in the observation. The maximum number of levels is 200.   Call for pricing
FSL The official FSL data format is similar to the format used by the National Severe Storms Forecast Center (NSSFC) in Kansas City. The first 4 lines of the sounding are identification and information lines. All additional lines are data lines. An entry of 32767 (original format) or 99999 (new format) indicates that the information is either missing, not reported, or not applicable.   Call for pricing
     

Other Formats

 

Price

CalMet MM5 No Description Available    Call for pricing

 

Note:  Place your mouse cursor over the name for a description of each data format.

Meteorological Data  -  Terrain Data
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