Weather during Op. Typhoon

Tried for nearly half an hour to find some clear numbers regarding temperatures during the deciding days of the battle for Moscow, yet my google-fu has let me down.

So, my questions are:

1. What exactly were the temperatures back then ?
2. What impact did they have on the fighting capability of the Red Army and Wehrmacht ?
3. Could the mildest possible weather have produced a different outcome, and if so to whose advantage ?
 
and to expand- the answer is not much effect. its either colder - which is a bitch or cold and below freezing which us also a bitch or cold but not freezing which is a muddy bitch.

None of which helps the German logs situation.
 
and to expand- the answer is not much effect. its either colder - which is a bitch or cold and below freezing which us also a bitch or cold but not freezing which is a muddy bitch.

None of which helps the German logs situation.


I was thinking somewhere along the line of cold enough to freeze the mud, yet only barely, say around -5. That way they get rid of the mud, yet don't freeze to death.
 
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