What kind of records were broken this season?

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abajan
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#21 Postby abajan » Fri Oct 21, 2005 9:40 pm

What stands out most in my mind is the incredible activity in July. Had the remainder of the season continued in the same vein, we probably would've exhausted the Greek alphabet too! :lol:
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Terrell
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#22 Postby Terrell » Fri Oct 21, 2005 10:03 pm

Let's hope that 2005's records aren't broken in 2006 (or in our lifetimes for that matter).
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#23 Postby cancunkid » Fri Oct 21, 2005 10:12 pm

How about season with the least amount of sleep for s2k members? :lol:
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#24 Postby Brent » Fri Oct 21, 2005 10:15 pm

cancunkid wrote:How about season with the least amount of sleep for s2k members? :lol:


:fools: :roflmao:

It's pretty bad when the first thing you can do in the morning and the last at night is visit this place... :eek:
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#25 Postby f5 » Sat Oct 22, 2005 1:35 am

Brent wrote:
jkt21787 wrote:2005...The Year that said "Screw the Records"...


2005... the year climatology was a bunch of garbage. :lol:


:Can:
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#26 Postby Matt-hurricanewatcher » Sat Oct 22, 2005 1:36 am

I read some where that the 98 millibar drop from 5am 18th to 5am 19th beat Super Typhoon forests record...WOW!!!
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#27 Postby wxmann_91 » Sat Oct 22, 2005 1:41 am

Hurricane Wilma also underwent the most rapid deepening for a 24-hour period ever measured. At noon on October 18, Wilma had a central pressure of 980 millibars (28.93 inches). At noon on October 19, Wilma had a central pressure of 882 millibars (26.04 inches), a pressure fall of 98 millibars (2.89 inches). That breaks the world record of 92 millibars (2.71 inches) set by Super Typhoon Forrest in the Western Pacific in 1983.


WRONG!! In the Atlantic, yes, but not worldwide. Forrest strengthened 100 mb in 24 hours, not 92 mb. We missed the record by two millibars.
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NC George
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#28 Postby NC George » Sat Oct 22, 2005 3:28 am

I think we should start offically calling cat 4 and 5 hurricanes, 'MAJOR HURRICANES' in the same manner they name intense typhoons, 'SUPER TYPHOONS.' Sure, they throw the term around, but it should show up in the record books that way.
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#29 Postby superfly » Sat Oct 22, 2005 3:33 am

wxmann_91 wrote:
Hurricane Wilma also underwent the most rapid deepening for a 24-hour period ever measured. At noon on October 18, Wilma had a central pressure of 980 millibars (28.93 inches). At noon on October 19, Wilma had a central pressure of 882 millibars (26.04 inches), a pressure fall of 98 millibars (2.89 inches). That breaks the world record of 92 millibars (2.71 inches) set by Super Typhoon Forrest in the Western Pacific in 1983.


WRONG!! In the Atlantic, yes, but not worldwide. Forrest strengthened 100 mb in 24 hours, not 92 mb. We missed the record by two millibars.


09 GMT 10/18/05 15.7N 80.0W 70 982 Tropical Storm
09 GMT 10/19/05 17.2N 82.5W 175 884 Category 5 Hurricane

Technically, Wilma did tie Forrest with 100mb/24hr since the dropsonde measurement of 884mb was calibrated to 882mb but wasn't done until the next advisory.
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#30 Postby Aslkahuna » Sat Oct 22, 2005 4:56 am

Category 4 and 5 hurricanes are already called Major Hurricanes (plus some other adjectives like catastrophic, extreme, dangerous, etc.). The problem is that the term Supertyphoon was coined long before the SS scale came into being as a way to identify typhoons with sustained winds double the minimal typhoon winds. But this does not correlate with any category boundary in the SS scale.

Steve
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#31 Postby 100feettstormsurge » Sat Oct 22, 2005 11:18 am

Probably a record amount of posts by HurricaneGirl saying "Holy Crap". :lol:
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#32 Postby Brent » Sat Oct 22, 2005 11:20 am

100feettstormsurge wrote:Probably a record amount of posts by HurricaneGirl saying "Holy Crap". :lol:


:lol:

Or a record number of posts by any member simply with this:

:eek:

in any number... :wink:
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