National Weather Service Text Product
AFOS product RWSBIS
Dates interpreted at 00:00 UTC Found 2 products at the given pil and timestamp. Scroll down to see them all.
Displaying AFOS PIL: RWSBIS
Product Timestamp: 2005-06-05 00:10 UTC
Bulk Download
Bulk Download Help
This bulk download tool provides the NWS text
in a raw form, hopefully directly usable by your processing system.
You can either provide a complete 6-character PIL/AFOS ID or provide
the 3-character base ID (e.g., AFD). The start and end
dates represent 00 UTC for those dates. The Zip format is useful as
the filenames will have the product timestamp, which is useful for
when the product format has ambiguous timestamps.
000 AWUS83 KBIS 050012 RWSBIS NDZ001>005-009>013-017>023-025-031>037-040>048-050-051-051300- WEATHER SUMMARY FOR WESTERN AND CENTRAL NORTH DAKOTA NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE BISMARCK ND 710 PM CDT SAT JUN 4 2005 A LOW PRESSURE SYSTEM OVER THE EASTERN DAKOTAS...BROUGHT INCREASING CLOUDS TO WESTERN AND CENTRAL NORTH DAKOTA TODAY. A FEW SHOWERS AND THUNDERSTORMS MADE THEIR WAY INTO THE EASTERN PART OF THE REGION... HOWEVER NO PRECIPITATION WAS RECORDED AT ANY OF THE MAJOR REPORTING STATIONS. HIGH TEMPERATURES THIS AFTERNOON RANGED FROM 70 TO 80 DEGREES. A SLIGHT CHANCE OF SHOWERS AND THUNDERSTORMS CAN BE EXPECTED THIS EVENING. LOOK FOR OVERNIGHT LOWS FROM AROUND 50 DEGREES TO THE MID 50S. $$
000 AWUS83 KBIS 050015 RWSBIS NDZ001>005-009>013-017>023-025-031>037-040>048-050-051-051300- WEATHER SUMMARY FOR WESTERN AND CENTRAL NORTH DAKOTA NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE BISMARCK ND 710 PM CDT SAT JUN 4 2005 A LOW PRESSURE SYSTEM OVER THE EASTERN DAKOTAS...BROUGHT INCREASING CLOUDS TO WESTERN AND CENTRAL NORTH DAKOTA TODAY. A FEW SHOWERS AND THUNDERSTORMS MADE THEIR WAY INTO THE EASTERN PART OF THE REGION... HOWEVER NO PRECIPITATION WAS RECORDED AT ANY OF THE MAJOR REPORTING STATIONS. HIGH TEMPERATURES THIS AFTERNOON RANGED FROM 69 TO 80 DEGREES. A SLIGHT CHANCE OF SHOWERS AND THUNDERSTORMS CAN BE EXPECTED THIS EVENING. LOOK FOR OVERNIGHT LOWS FROM AROUND 50 DEGREES TO THE MID 50S. $$