You Tell Me

Discuss the recovery and aftermath of landfalling hurricanes. Please be sensitive to those that have been directly impacted. Political threads will be deleted without notice. This is the place to come together not divide.

Moderator: S2k Moderators

Message
Author
User avatar
brunota2003
S2K Supporter
S2K Supporter
Posts: 9476
Age: 34
Joined: Sat Jul 30, 2005 9:56 pm
Location: Stanton, KY...formerly Havelock, NC
Contact:

#21 Postby brunota2003 » Wed Nov 02, 2005 2:42 pm

And before you guys go, how can you say that was ONLY a Cat 1, take a look at these pictures: ImageImage That was ONLY from strong TS winds, which was from an 85 MPH Hurricane off the coast of NC known as Pain in the Butt Ophelia, when you can explain those, then complain about Wilma, I'm still seeing tarps on SCHOOLS around here from ONLY a Cat 1, which we ONLY got TS winds from, so maybe some people need a gut check, guess what, anything with the word HURRICANE before its name is going to be bad, welcome to the 2005 Hurricane Season...
0 likes   

User avatar
sponger
S2K Supporter
S2K Supporter
Posts: 1620
Joined: Thu Jul 22, 2004 11:26 am
Location: St Augustine

#22 Postby sponger » Wed Nov 02, 2005 3:11 pm

Looks like tornando damage or possibly a microburst. You cannot fathom how widespread the damage is in Broward County.
0 likes   

User avatar
DESTRUCTION5
Category 5
Category 5
Posts: 4423
Age: 43
Joined: Wed Sep 03, 2003 11:25 am
Location: Stuart, FL

#23 Postby DESTRUCTION5 » Wed Nov 02, 2005 3:20 pm

brunota2003 wrote:And before you guys go, how can you say that was ONLY a Cat 1, take a look at these pictures: ImageImage That was ONLY from strong TS winds, which was from an 85 MPH Hurricane off the coast of NC known as Pain in the Butt Ophelia, when you can explain those, then complain about Wilma, I'm still seeing tarps on SCHOOLS around here from ONLY a Cat 1, which we ONLY got TS winds from, so maybe some people need a gut check, guess what, anything with the word HURRICANE before its name is going to be bad, welcome to the 2005 Hurricane Season...


Big difference between a Coastal Storm surge with a storm blowing 80 MPH as it drifts 1 MPH for 2 days compared to Wilma Moving 30 MPH NE off the coast...
0 likes   

User avatar
brunota2003
S2K Supporter
S2K Supporter
Posts: 9476
Age: 34
Joined: Sat Jul 30, 2005 9:56 pm
Location: Stanton, KY...formerly Havelock, NC
Contact:

#24 Postby brunota2003 » Wed Nov 02, 2005 3:35 pm

most of that isnt surge, we dont have big high-rises here though, that makes the damage 5x worse than what it is, they should be thankful they didnt have a true Cat 3 come thru there... just my $0.02...oh, here: Image
0 likes   

jlauderdal
S2K Supporter
S2K Supporter
Posts: 7182
Joined: Wed May 19, 2004 5:46 am
Location: NE Fort Lauderdale
Contact:

Re: You Tell Me

#25 Postby jlauderdal » Wed Nov 02, 2005 6:52 pm

Windtalker1 wrote:That this was caused by a Cat 1 Hurricane...... http://lan.atlaspencil.com/hurricanewilma.html


i dont know what we were hit with but increase it a category or god forbid 2 and south floirda will be at a complete standtill. 9 days no power and there is another 500,000 people to go, traffic lights barely evident in broward county and debris piles in front of all houses..this was a real scene and continues to be.
0 likes   

User avatar
HeatherAKC
S2K Supporter
S2K Supporter
Posts: 286
Joined: Thu Oct 10, 2002 2:28 pm
Location: Miami Lakes, Florida

#26 Postby HeatherAKC » Wed Nov 02, 2005 7:24 pm

Dr. Jonah Rainwater
Posted: Wed Nov 02, 2005 1:28 pm Post subject:

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Actually, it doesn't look any worse than Katrina's Cat1 landfall in South Florida


I guess this proves that looks can be deceiving.
0 likes   

User avatar
Downdraft
S2K Supporter
S2K Supporter
Posts: 906
Joined: Wed Oct 09, 2002 8:45 pm
Location: Sanford, Florida
Contact:

#27 Postby Downdraft » Wed Nov 02, 2005 7:42 pm

Looks like what I would expect in a Cat 1 hurricane. People simply fail to realize that a storm is a complex multicell entity. Microbursts, downdrafts, vortexs and a whole variety of things all going on at once. Your pictures are a good reason why some of us in here get so sick and tired of hearing "it's only a Cat 1."
0 likes   

User avatar
jasons2k
Storm2k Executive
Storm2k Executive
Posts: 8245
Age: 51
Joined: Wed Jul 06, 2005 12:32 pm
Location: The Woodlands, TX

#28 Postby jasons2k » Wed Nov 02, 2005 7:50 pm

Looks like solid Cat. 1 sustained with higher gusts to me.

Just to give you some reference - see that Billboard picture (7th one from the bottom)? After Rita, in Lousiana along I-10 (which is well inland), I saw one of those large steel billboards, just like that one, with the pole snapped in half.
0 likes   

f5
Category 5
Category 5
Posts: 1550
Joined: Thu Aug 25, 2005 3:29 pm
Location: Waco,tx

#29 Postby f5 » Wed Nov 02, 2005 7:53 pm

imagine Andrew going over downtown Miami
0 likes   

User avatar
skysummit
S2K Supporter
S2K Supporter
Posts: 5305
Age: 49
Joined: Tue Aug 31, 2004 11:09 pm
Location: Ponchatoula, LA
Contact:

#30 Postby skysummit » Wed Nov 02, 2005 8:13 pm

~Floydbuster wrote:
Dr. Jonah Rainwater wrote:Actually, it doesn't look any worse than Katrina's Cat1 landfall in South Florida. I can believe that damage was caused by a Cat1. I mean, think about straightline winds. Out here in the Texas prairies, we have lines of severe thunderstorms that can sometimes carry winds of 50-60mph, sometimes with higher gusts. They only last about as long as the thunderstorm, perhaps half an hour, but I would not be surprised to see straightline winds cause all of the damage I saw in those pictures. Mobile homes are no match for genuine straightline winds either, and an unsupported brick wall isn't the most secure structure to begin with. Shingles always go flying, and debris like that probably caused alot of those broken windows you see, and trees and power lines wouldn't even stand up to a strong tropical storm. The only additional thing you had was the surge, which even at 6-10 feet, could easily flip those cars. Think about how powerful a fast-moving flash flood is. They only need to be a few feet deep, and it's right along the beach.

What's really scary is that Wilma might become more expensive than Andrew...without actually doing any real structural damage aside from mobile homes. The post-Andrew building codes have saved South Florida from the prospect of structural damage outside of an enormous landalling Category 4 or 5, but there are just so many soft targets that price tags near Andrew, Wilma, Charley, and Ivan may become routine every time a major hurricane strikes the Florida peninsula. Even Frances became like the 5th costliest hurricane (after Hugo, as of 2004) just by striking Florida as a Category 2. Keep in mind, West-Central Florida and Northern Florida still haven't been tested at all, meaning that none of their "soft targets" have been weeded out yet, meaning that a Wilma-type storm striking the Tampa area sometime in the future may end up being just as costly as Wilma, and Wilma was actually a fairly routine situation in the Gulf of Mexico in October. It probably won't be very many more years.


Exactly, sustained 50 mph winds to the average joe, may seem like Cat 1. Then when they have a gust to 99 mph, they think they just had a gust to 130 mph.


Very good point. Those pics seem like Cat 1 sustained winds with gusts to Cat 2. If people never experienced a hurricane before (and I mean in the eyewall, or actual cane force winds), they wouldn't realized how strong even a 60mph wind is.
0 likes   

T'Bonz
Category 1
Category 1
Posts: 421
Joined: Wed Sep 01, 2004 5:23 pm
Location: Cary, North Carolina

#31 Postby T'Bonz » Thu Nov 03, 2005 12:51 am

Could you tell us from what city/cities these pictures are?

The ripped porch one looks like a porch in my mother's complex in Margate.

Some of the areas look like Ft L, others like Naples. I could be wrong....
0 likes   


Return to “Hurricane Recovery and Aftermath”

Who is online

Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 2 guests