You're in serious denial.

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LSU wrote:TS warning issued 48 hours before landfall -- 12 hours before those areas on the SELA coast began feeling TS winds.
10-15ft surge is what meteorologists in NOLA are saying for those three parishes. NOLA itself experienced 5-10 surge, avg. being 8 ft.

LSU wrote:TS warning issued 48 hours before landfall -- 12 hours before those areas on the SELA coast began feeling TS winds.
10-15ft surge is what meteorologists in NOLA are saying for those three parishes. NOLA itself experienced 5-10 surge, avg. being 8 ft.

LSU wrote:10-15ft surge is what meteorologists in NOLA are saying for those three parishes. NOLA itself experienced 5-10 surge, avg. being 8 ft.


SouthernWx wrote:T I've already realized that Katrina's death toll will likely cost Max Mayfield his job.....even though the warnings, forecasts, and advisories were excellent; there was no reason for so many to die. The hurricane advisories during Katrina.....and during Rita were as accurate as you can get, yet still NHC gets blamed, second guessed, and in all probability these rants and protests will end up costing some (in addition to Dr Mayfield) very competent and professional meteorologists their careers
PW

LSU wrote:Let me ask you this:
Have you ever heard of an area under a TS warning getting a 15 foot storm surge? The SELA coastline probably is put under a TS warning 3-5 times a year and rarely does anything come of it. Worse case scenario you'll get something like Cindy 05 (which the NHC failed LA on again, underestimating her strength) and have strong winds and a 5 foot surge.
If tidal surge is what causes the most damage and kills the most people, shouldn't you emphasize the surge over wind in warnings? A hurricane warning should not extend to what winds you'll receive, but rather, what surge you'll get. Even if that had been the case, the NHC would have been wrong this time, as they only forecast HALF of what was the actual surge from Rita. And even if they had been right with the surge, they were still wrong with the wind. SELA received hurricane winds. Parts of TX that were under hurricane warnings didn't even receive TS winds.
For the poster who says you'll get gusts to 109 in a TS, you've not followed many storms. The NHC almost always over-estmates what the winds will be when the storm comes ashore. A storm like Rita comes ashore with official sustained 120 usually means you'll have sustained 80 with a few gusts maybe reaching 115-120 in isolated spots. Just look at the highest gusts recorded from Rita. None reached 120. And that is the norm and practice of the NHC.

x-y-no wrote:Best working source of objective data I can find is station ILDL1 - Isle Dernieres, LA, located in open water south of SELA.
The anemometer at this platform is located 19.2 meters above sea level, which means one should reduce the observed speed by a bit. But for argument's sake, let's just use the observed speed.
Here's the wind speed chart:
As you can see, the sustained wind at 20:00gmt of the 22nd (the time you claim sustained TS winds were being experienced in SELA) at this station over open water south of SELA was only 28 to 30 knots - below TS strength.
Well, somebody had an anemoter (sp) that recorded an 80 mph wind gust in the western part of Terrebonne Parish.
EDIT: Also note, the sustained winds never reached anywhere near hurricane strength.

cajungal wrote:x-y-no wrote:Best working source of objective data I can find is station ILDL1 - Isle Dernieres, LA, located in open water south of SELA.
The anemometer at this platform is located 19.2 meters above sea level, which means one should reduce the observed speed by a bit. But for argument's sake, let's just use the observed speed.
Here's the wind speed chart:
As you can see, the sustained wind at 20:00gmt of the 22nd (the time you claim sustained TS winds were being experienced in SELA) at this station over open water south of SELA was only 28 to 30 knots - below TS strength.
Well, somebody had an anemoter (sp) that recorded an 80 mph wind gust in the western part of Terrebonne Parish.
EDIT: Also note, the sustained winds never reached anywhere near hurricane strength.


cajungal wrote:Well, somebody had an anemoter (sp) that recorded an 80 mph wind gust in the western part of Terrebonne Parish.

x-y-no wrote:cajungal wrote:Well, somebody had an anemoter (sp) that recorded an 80 mph wind gust in the western part of Terrebonne Parish.
OK, three things:
1) What time was that? LSU's contention is that there were sustained TS winds in SELA only 12 hours after the TS warning went up. I am offering the only objective evidence I have found so far. This evidence clearly contradicts that claim. I'm willing to look at any further evidence, however. I note that LSU has yet to provide any - only unsubstantiated claims.
2) What station was this? What location? Do we know this station is properly calibrated?
3) 80 knot gusts are not inconsistant with sustained TS winds. So even if we establish that this measurement was accurate, it is fully consistant with the NHC advisories.

brunota2003 wrote:She said 80 mph, not knots, which is even more TS wind believable, you know what i mean... thats like 60-70 mph sustained, if that high, still waiting for these so called hurricane force SUSTAINED winds NO got... maybe it was only in their house...


x-y-no wrote:brunota2003 wrote:She said 80 mph, not knots, which is even more TS wind believable, you know what i mean... thats like 60-70 mph sustained, if that high, still waiting for these so called hurricane force SUSTAINED winds NO got... maybe it was only in their house...
Thanks for catching that. Obviously, I have knots in my head.![]()
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Actually ... old sailor's habit. I think in knots, not mph.
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