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Sustainable Repair in Jindabyne, New South Wales | Vehicle glass service



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Sustainable Repair

Locality: Jindabyne, New South Wales

Phone: +61 422 016 114



Address: Central Coast & Snowy Mountains 2627 Jindabyne, NSW, Australia

Website: http://www.SustainableRepair.com

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24.01.2022 Has your car been affected by the recent hailstorm on the Central Coast? Sustainable Repair can help with 50% insurance excess rebates to the value of $500 available. Call 0422016114 to arrange an inspection & estimate



23.01.2022 Mobile PDR, no mess, no paintwork, no lost time leaving your car for repairs, call 0422016114

22.01.2022 Before and After. This Subaru was saved from having its roof cut off and repainted after being caught in a hailstorm. No paint required

17.01.2022 Sustainable Repair can help if you notice a few extra car park dents this winter. Doors guards, bonnets or roofs can all be repaired quick and cost effectively at your convenience. No chemicals No mess No Harm to you, your car or the environment



15.01.2022 HOW DOES HAIL FORM? In very basic terms, hail forms high up in very cold Cumulonimbus clouds, which can easily grow to over 50,000 ft! Lower regions of these... storms contain warmer air, the upper levels are below freezing. Strong up drafts in these cells pulls rain drops up into these cold zones where it freezes. Down drafts then pull this frozen droplet down where it thaws & gathers more droplets to it, & is again pulled up into the cold clouds. This cycle creates bigger hail stones. Once these stones become too heavy for the updraft, gravity will kick in & they fall from the cloud. So basically the stronger the storm, the stronger the updraft, the stronger the updraft the more times this cycle can repeat, the bigger the stones grow. The size of the stone is also relative to how fast it falls - the bigger the stone, the more speed. It is certainly possible to recognise a possible hail storm on radar. The darker the echoes the stronger the cell. The BoM classifies "large hail" as being stones lager than 2cm. There is also a specific radar echo called a "hail spike" which is also a sign. Regularly seen in the US but not so common in Oz. Clouds take on particular characteristics when they contain hail, if you know what to look for, & when hail is falling close to you, you can often hear the "roar" of a hail shaft as it approaches. We found this graphic online, so hopefully it demonstrates what we have described here.

14.01.2022 Nice job down by the water today.

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