ok...im going to say this once and this isnt pointed at just you...Lindaloo wrote:Hurricane Hunter 914 wrote:I still say cat-4! The surge was incredible and the wind damage extensive.
The surge was definitely a CAT5 surge all over the coast.


Moderator: S2k Moderators
ok...im going to say this once and this isnt pointed at just you...Lindaloo wrote:Hurricane Hunter 914 wrote:I still say cat-4! The surge was incredible and the wind damage extensive.
The surge was definitely a CAT5 surge all over the coast.
Extremeweatherguy wrote:I think that is a little extreme. To compare Katrina's wind damage to that of a storm like Andrew is crazy. There is no way the winds were that powerful. Also, concerning the surge, just because it may be an 18+ foot surge does not mean it is a Cat. 5 storm. As we have all learned in these debates...large storms that quickly die to weaker storms will still carry their stronger surge with them for a day or so.Lindaloo wrote:I still believe they received CAT5 winds when she made first landfall. Just did not look to weaken that much.
brunota2003 wrote:ok...im going to say this once and this isnt pointed at just you...Lindaloo wrote:Hurricane Hunter 914 wrote:I still say cat-4! The surge was incredible and the wind damage extensive.
The surge was definitely a CAT5 surge all over the coast.you just had the shorter post for quoting...
THERE IS NO SUCH LEVEL AS CAT 5, or 4, or 3 surge...surge is surge...it knows no limits or boundaries...and the "surge limit" the NHC sets on the SS scale is based on computer models using an "average" sized hurricane...not a monster sized one...what does it take to drive the point home that there is no limit on how big or small surge can be? every hurricane is different...so is the surge/wind/rain/after the storm/etc impacts...
yes...by the SS scale she did...BUT she was alot larger than most hurricanes, including the ones the NHC uses to set the SS, AND from her weakening she did continue to carry that very large surge with her...Lindaloo wrote:brunota2003 wrote:ok...im going to say this once and this isnt pointed at just you...Lindaloo wrote:Hurricane Hunter 914 wrote:I still say cat-4! The surge was incredible and the wind damage extensive.
The surge was definitely a CAT5 surge all over the coast.you just had the shorter post for quoting...
THERE IS NO SUCH LEVEL AS CAT 5, or 4, or 3 surge...surge is surge...it knows no limits or boundaries...and the "surge limit" the NHC sets on the SS scale is based on computer models using an "average" sized hurricane...not a monster sized one...what does it take to drive the point home that there is no limit on how big or small surge can be? every hurricane is different...so is the surge/wind/rain/after the storm/etc impacts...
Mike Watkins stated also that Katrina had a CAT5 surge. I take his word for it, thanks!
Frank P wrote:I really don't care what the winds were with Katrina... the MS Gulf Coast for all practical purposes is pretty much gone, at least every thing on the front beach for several blocks inland and along the bays and rivers...
Camille certainly had much stronger wind than Katrina but Katrina's damage was 3-4 fold greater than Camilles.... if not more... all 13 houses in my neighborhood are destroyed.. Camille destroyed zip, zero, nada.. Camille's winds were in the 150 mph range at least on the MS coast in Biloxi, NO HOMES ON MY BLOCK WERE DESTROYED... Camille put a 22 foot surge in my neighborhood, NO HOMES WERE DESTROYED... Katrina put at least a 26 foot surge in my neighborhood and destroyed everything... of course Katrina's surge pounded my neighborhood for hours... Camille did not last nearly as long... so another very important thing to remember relative to degree of damage is how long the storm will last, which in part is relative to the size of the storm and its forward speed.. Katrina was a large slow moving storm.. Camille was smaller and quicker...
What if the coast was destroyed entirely by wind and NOT water, what difference would it make... it's still gone...
Katrina was such a unique storm that focusing so much on the wind is just wasted effort in my opinion...
Why aren't we trying to understand how a Cat 3 storm brought in perhaps one of the greatest storm surges of recorded weather history...
125 or 130 or even 140 mph winds aren't all that much different in the long haul... but a surge of 10 feet, then 15 feet, then 20 feet, and for Katrina it could have been as high as 35 feet in some areas... well that's a much different ballgame all together... Katrina's surge has changed the way we look at hurricanes, at least for me.
Ixolib wrote:Frank P wrote:I really don't care what the winds were with Katrina... the MS Gulf Coast for all practical purposes is pretty much gone, at least every thing on the front beach for several blocks inland and along the bays and rivers...
Camille certainly had much stronger wind than Katrina but Katrina's damage was 3-4 fold greater than Camilles.... if not more... all 13 houses in my neighborhood are destroyed.. Camille destroyed zip, zero, nada.. Camille's winds were in the 150 mph range at least on the MS coast in Biloxi, NO HOMES ON MY BLOCK WERE DESTROYED... Camille put a 22 foot surge in my neighborhood, NO HOMES WERE DESTROYED... Katrina put at least a 26 foot surge in my neighborhood and destroyed everything... of course Katrina's surge pounded my neighborhood for hours... Camille did not last nearly as long... so another very important thing to remember relative to degree of damage is how long the storm will last, which in part is relative to the size of the storm and its forward speed.. Katrina was a large slow moving storm.. Camille was smaller and quicker...
What if the coast was destroyed entirely by wind and NOT water, what difference would it make... it's still gone...
Katrina was such a unique storm that focusing so much on the wind is just wasted effort in my opinion...
Why aren't we trying to understand how a Cat 3 storm brought in perhaps one of the greatest storm surges of recorded weather history...
125 or 130 or even 140 mph winds aren't all that much different in the long haul... but a surge of 10 feet, then 15 feet, then 20 feet, and for Katrina it could have been as high as 35 feet in some areas... well that's a much different ballgame all together... Katrina's surge has changed the way we look at hurricanes, at least for me.
Well said, Frank. And you are absolutely right about the difference between winds of 120 or 140 and surge of 15 feet or 35 feet. Apples and oranges, and I'll take the wind any day over the water. And your experience in Camille was the exact same here in my neighborhood. Yep, give me the wind any day!!!!!
But, for those who have not experienced the force of surge/storm tide first-hand, and because wind has always been the measure for 'canes, that's why people are so hung up on that aspect. Before Katrina, that was my gig too. Not anymore...
BTW - Drove by your "house" (I think). It is virtually impossible for me to get my bearings along your stretch (or any stretch for that matter) of Hwy 90 anymore. Is your trailer the one that is real close to 90, or is yours further back? I saw the brick wall along the sidewalk, but couldn't tell which one was yours as they're all kinda broken up and mixed together now... Been driving that route since I was 15 (38 years) and I CANNOT figure out what is where!!!![]()
Can't believe we're seven months into this thing...
Hurricane Floyd wrote:Its pointless to set a number for each category and how many feet of surge its going to produce its unpredictible.
COASTAL STORM SURGE FLOODING OF 15 TO 20 FEET ABOVE NORMAL TIDE
LEVELS...LOCALLY AS HIGH AS 25 FEET ALONG WITH LARGE AND DANGEROUS
BATTERING WAVES...CAN BE EXPECTED NEAR AND TO THE EAST OF WHERE THE
CENTER MAKES LANDFALL.
COASTAL STORM SURGE FLOODING OF 18 TO 22 FEET ABOVE NORMAL TIDE
LEVELS...LOCALLY AS HIGH AS 28 FEET ALONG WITH LARGE AND DANGEROUS
BATTERING WAVES...CAN BE EXPECTED NEAR AND TO THE EAST OF WHERE THE
CENTER MAKES LANDFALL.
Lindaloo wrote:Hurricane Floyd wrote:Its pointless to set a number for each category and how many feet of surge its going to produce its unpredictible.
It is obvious you did not read the advisories that were put out on Katrina. The surge WAS predicted. Can you please EXPLAIN how they issued this and it was unpredicted as you stated above?COASTAL STORM SURGE FLOODING OF 15 TO 20 FEET ABOVE NORMAL TIDE
LEVELS...LOCALLY AS HIGH AS 25 FEET ALONG WITH LARGE AND DANGEROUS
BATTERING WAVES...CAN BE EXPECTED NEAR AND TO THE EAST OF WHERE THE
CENTER MAKES LANDFALL.COASTAL STORM SURGE FLOODING OF 18 TO 22 FEET ABOVE NORMAL TIDE
LEVELS...LOCALLY AS HIGH AS 28 FEET ALONG WITH LARGE AND DANGEROUS
BATTERING WAVES...CAN BE EXPECTED NEAR AND TO THE EAST OF WHERE THE
CENTER MAKES LANDFALL.
http://www.esl.lsu.edu/quicklinks/hurri ... 5/KATRINA/
Derek Ortt wrote:for hurricanes of cat 3 or lower intensities, flooding (surge and rain) by far is the most destructive impacts.
HOWEVER, once you pass the cat 3 threshhold, surge becomes a meaningless variable overall. The last 3 cat 4's and 5's to hit the USA (Andrew, Iniki, and Charley) had insignificant surges (except Andrew, but even then, the surge of near 17 feet is not remembered), but the winds itself caused total destruction, leaving the areas resembling an air raid
The point is, don't ignore the winds and think that surge is the only thing that causes damage. It is until a certain threshold is reached, then the hurricane becomes about the wind, which is of upper F2 or F3 intensity
Derek Ortt wrote:for hurricanes of cat 3 or lower intensities, flooding (surge and rain) by far is the most destructive impacts.
HOWEVER, once you pass the cat 3 threshhold, surge becomes a meaningless variable overall. The last 3 cat 4's and 5's to hit the USA (Andrew, Iniki, and Charley) had insignificant surges (except Andrew, but even then, the surge of near 17 feet is not remembered), but the winds itself caused total destruction, leaving the areas resembling an air raid
The point is, don't ignore the winds and think that surge is the only thing that causes damage. It is until a certain threshold is reached, then the hurricane becomes about the wind, which is of upper F2 or F3 intensity
Lindaloo wrote:Hurricane Floyd wrote:Its pointless to set a number for each category and how many feet of surge its going to produce its unpredictible.
It is obvious you did not read the advisories that were put out on Katrina. The surge WAS predicted. Can you please EXPLAIN how they issued this and it was unpredicted as you stated above?COASTAL STORM SURGE FLOODING OF 15 TO 20 FEET ABOVE NORMAL TIDE
LEVELS...LOCALLY AS HIGH AS 25 FEET ALONG WITH LARGE AND DANGEROUS
BATTERING WAVES...CAN BE EXPECTED NEAR AND TO THE EAST OF WHERE THE
CENTER MAKES LANDFALL.COASTAL STORM SURGE FLOODING OF 18 TO 22 FEET ABOVE NORMAL TIDE
LEVELS...LOCALLY AS HIGH AS 28 FEET ALONG WITH LARGE AND DANGEROUS
BATTERING WAVES...CAN BE EXPECTED NEAR AND TO THE EAST OF WHERE THE
CENTER MAKES LANDFALL.
http://www.esl.lsu.edu/quicklinks/hurri ... 5/KATRINA/
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 71 guests