Quote:
Ok. I'm actually stealing this idea from a fellow S2K member(who doesn't post that much): They should drop the Saffir-Simpson scale altogether and just report the barometric pressure and give some reports of winds in every quadrant of the afflicted area.
Why?
Firstly, it'll end all this bickering on "how powerful the storm was."
Secondly, every aspect of the storm is different in every quadrant; hurricanes, and meteorology altogether, are completely fluid. Every square inch is different and putting such a broad "judgement" on such an entity is worthless....
just my opinion (End quote)
My buddy suggested this idea in a "meteorological" debate and it did make me wonder and consider the idea. I mean think about...meteorology is a fluid science. Why aren't the weather systems studied(hurricanes, cyclones, tornadoes, tropical depressions, whirlwinds, squalls, what-have-you, etc...) considered fluid as well? Why use such a broad rating such as the Saffir-Simpson scale on something that is cleary fluid. Putting such a broad "rating" on such a fluctuating system is almost asinine.
Opinions wanted.







