A still hunter on a cold stand loses body heat far faster in wind, and the air temperature alone hides that. This calculator applies the official US National Weather Service wind chill formula, estimates how quickly exposed skin reaches frostbite risk, and recommends a layering system suited to the conditions.
How it works
The NWS 2001 wind chill formula (Fahrenheit, mph) is:
WC = 35.74 + 0.6215·T − 35.75·V^0.16 + 0.4275·T·V^0.16
where T is air temperature and V is wind speed. It is defined for temperatures
at or below 50°F and winds above 3 mph; below that the wind chill is effectively the
air temperature. Celsius and km/h inputs are converted internally and the result is
shown in both unit systems.
Frostbite-risk time falls steeply as wind chill drops: around 30 minutes at −18°F and roughly 10 minutes near −35°F. The tool maps the computed wind chill onto that NWS exposure scale and scales clothing layers with the effective temperature.
Example and tips
At 15°F with a 20 mph wind, the formula gives a wind chill near −2°F — cold enough that exposed skin is uncomfortable but not in immediate frostbite danger. A wind-blocking outer shell matters more than raw insulation here, because most of the heat loss is convective. Since a still sit produces little body heat, dress one step warmer than you would for an active hike, keep a chemical hand warmer for fingers and toes, and cover your face when the wind chill drops below 0°F.