Mighty low pressure here 60 m. N. of Tampa.....

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dixiebreeze
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Mighty low pressure here 60 m. N. of Tampa.....

#1 Postby dixiebreeze » Fri Aug 26, 2005 4:13 pm

Pressure: 29.76 in / 1007.7 hPa (Falling)

Can't recall when I've seen it this low, except maybe when Frances and Jean went through.

Any reports on other west coast Florida areas?
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feederband
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#2 Postby feederband » Fri Aug 26, 2005 4:19 pm

I don't know about pressures but we just got rocked by a thunder storm in plant city..
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#3 Postby gtalum » Fri Aug 26, 2005 4:21 pm

1005 millibars according to the barometer in my office in Venice (~60 miles south of Tampa). I never pay any attention, though, so I don't know what's normal. :lol:
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#4 Postby dixiebreeze » Fri Aug 26, 2005 5:42 pm

gtalum wrote:1005 millibars according to the barometer in my office in Venice (~60 miles south of Tampa). I never pay any attention, though, so I don't know what's normal. :lol:


1005 is looow!
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#5 Postby Rainband » Fri Aug 26, 2005 5:55 pm

Heat Index: 75 °F / 24 °C
Humidity: 87%
Dew Point: 71 °F / 22 °C
Wind: 3 mph / 4.8 km/h from the ENE
Wind Gust: 0.0 mph / 0.0 km/h
Pressure: 29.74 in / 1007.0 hPa
UV: 0 out of 16
Clouds (AGL): Mostly Cloudy 2900 ft /
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Re: Mighty low pressure here 60 m. N. of Tampa.....

#6 Postby Steve Cosby » Fri Aug 26, 2005 5:56 pm

dixiebreeze wrote:Pressure: 29.76 in / 1007.7 hPa (Falling)

Can't recall when I've seen it this low, except maybe when Frances and Jean went through.

Any reports on other west coast Florida areas?


That's one of the reasons stated by some of the experts why Cat 4/5 is such a distinct possibility with Katrina - generally low pressure environment all around allowing for the storm to go deeper.
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Re: Mighty low pressure here 60 m. N. of Tampa.....

#7 Postby dixiebreeze » Fri Aug 26, 2005 6:39 pm

Steve Cosby wrote:
dixiebreeze wrote:Pressure: 29.76 in / 1007.7 hPa (Falling)

Can't recall when I've seen it this low, except maybe when Frances and Jean went through.

Any reports on other west coast Florida areas?


That's one of the reasons stated by some of the experts why Cat 4/5 is such a distinct possibility with Katrina - generally low pressure environment all around allowing for the storm to go deeper.


Well, I definitely don't think she will shrink. :)
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