Yeah. If you do 1.8(30)+32, you will find that the temperature of the water is 86 degrees fahrenheit, which may even be a warm temperature to swim in.
2007-11-17 17:16:43
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answer #1
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answered by Kel 2
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I belong to the old Fahrenheit school, so 30 Celsius is 54+32=86F, which is too warm for good swimming. I used to keep my indoor pool at about 78F, which is about 25C. That will feel cool when you first get in, but once you've swum a couple of laps, it will be quite comfortable. Normal room air temperature is 21C, unless you like to waste energy in heating fuel.
2007-11-17 17:31:12
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answer #2
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answered by TitoBob 7
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That is a pretty warm swimming pool, so if you are just swimming for recreation, that would be a perfect temperature. However, if that is for competitive swimming, it is probably too warm. I don't know if this is the same for everyone, but when I do swim practice in water that is too warm, it makes me fell really sick and slows me down, so that would not be good for practice.
2007-11-21 04:59:02
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answer #3
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answered by SwimGurl 2
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Yes. It would be a very pleasant experience. Normal room temperature is around 25 degrees celsius, so 30 degrees would be a good temperature.
2007-11-17 17:17:45
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answer #4
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answered by skdonweb 4
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Yes, wish the temperature was that good here. We are getting close to 6 months upcoming of winter.
2007-11-18 09:58:55
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answer #5
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answered by gfcbarracker 6
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for normal swimming ye, but for competive swim meets, no, the hot water actually makes you relaxe, causing you to go slower the cooler for competive swimming the better, but for recreation, go ahead, it like a hot tub! only cooler
2007-11-18 03:40:37
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answer #6
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answered by Anonymous
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30c is 86f. yes if you want a hot tub 23-25c would be better.
2007-11-18 02:41:46
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answer #7
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answered by Anonymous
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If you're a penguin.
2007-11-17 17:14:53
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answer #8
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answered by nckmcgwn 5
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