Last modified: 2013-12-18 by ian macdonald
Keywords: thailand | weather flags | visual storm warning signal |
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According to this WMO page (PDF, link not working), Thailand uses two flags we know from the well-known US signal set (also PDF, also not working), plus a number of others which are specific. Basically there are two groups of signals, one set “indicating the locality of storms”, the other “intensity of storms” (correcting an obvious illogicality in the text). Both may be hoisted together however, while a special case is the signal for normal weather conditions.
Jan Mertens, 13 Apr 2008
37a (yellow flag) concerns “Area 1: Gulf of Thailand east coast to Lat. 5°N and Long. 105°E”.
7:1038a (blue flag) concerns “Area 2: Gulf of Thailand west coast to Lat. 5°N”.
7:1043a (red flag) concerns “Area 3: Andaman Sea bounded by west coast of southern Myanmar, west coast of southern Thailand. Long. 97°E, Lat. 5°N and Lat. 14°N”.
7:1051a (blue flag pierced yellow) concerns “Area 4: South China Sea bounded by southern Viet Nam coast, Lat. 12°N, Lat. 5°N, Long. 105°E and Long. 112°E”.
56a (red pennant): “Typhoon or cyclone or storm with wind speeds near center 64 kt and upwards”.
4:536a (blue pennant): “Tropical storm or storm with wind speeds near center from 34 kt and over but not exceeding 63 kt”.
4:535a (yellow pennant): “Tropical depression or storm with wind speeds near center not exceeding 33 kt”.
There are two notes:
Finally, “at normal weather conditions (no tropical depression of storm or typhoon) the white pennant with red circle (52a) will be displayed at the upper yard-arm at Bangkok Harbour Limit I (Pong Pachjamit Port, Pagklongsarn, Dhonburi)”.
Jan Mertens, 13 Apr 2008