This arguement has gone on for 4 months to the day almost so
Moderator: S2k Moderators
Forum rules
The posts in this forum are NOT official forecasts and should not be used as such. They are just the opinion of the poster and may or may not be backed by sound meteorological data. They are NOT endorsed by any professional institution or STORM2K. For official information, please refer to products from the National Hurricane Center and National Weather Service.
should have rephrased what I said, surge only becomes meaningless if you actually get sustained cat 4 or 5 winds (as the gusts then start approaching 200 m.p.h.)
Holmes in Cayman were designed to withstand major hurricane conditions, and Ivan flattened them, partially due to the fact that the eye wall sat over the coast for a long time Similar happened in south dade (BEFORE I came here) during Andrew
my point is that while the surge brings destruction straight from hell, lets not make the pre Andrew mistake in thinking that the winds do not cause that much damage
Holmes in Cayman were designed to withstand major hurricane conditions, and Ivan flattened them, partially due to the fact that the eye wall sat over the coast for a long time Similar happened in south dade (BEFORE I came here) during Andrew
my point is that while the surge brings destruction straight from hell, lets not make the pre Andrew mistake in thinking that the winds do not cause that much damage
0 likes
-
- S2K Supporter
- Posts: 2777
- Joined: Fri Aug 29, 2003 10:52 am
- Location: Biloxi Beach, Ms
- Contact:
Derek Ortt wrote:should have rephrased what I said, surge only becomes meaningless if you actually get sustained cat 4 or 5 winds (as the gusts then start approaching 200 m.p.h.)
Holmes in Cayman were designed to withstand major hurricane conditions, and Ivan flattened them, partially due to the fact that the eye wall sat over the coast for a long time Similar happened in south dade (BEFORE I came here) during Andrew
my point is that while the surge brings destruction straight from hell, lets not make the pre Andrew mistake in thinking that the winds do not cause that much damage
Points well taken......
One thing about the Homestead area that contributed to its demise was the poor construction of the homes in the area... many homes were build without the proper hurricane strapping system... still not many homes can withstand strait line winds of more than 160 for very long, even the ones designed for such wind loading.. you get more than that and its good bye home... even for the well built home... but in normal hurricanes you expect this wind force to be limited in a very small area, ... so the complete and total devastation from the winds is limited in area ... but that doesn't really matter to those who are directly impacted from it... I guess I'm still in denial relative to the degree and scope of Katrina's storm surge damages... from Pascagoula to Waveland to Slidell La, its almost total and complete devastation... and its all because of surge.... unprecedented
Final point, we just don't know how lucky we were with Katrina... what if she had not weakened and came in at a severe Cat 5!!
I just can't image the scale of destruction that Katrina would have generated had she hit the MS and LA coast with sustained winds of 175 mph... not only would you have had total devastation in areas well removed from the coast... the surge might have approached biblical levels of perhaps 40 feet plus along the entire area (one can only image what the max might have been, 50 feet?) .. Which would for all practical purposes completely submerged the entire peninsular of Biloxi and causing a complete and total annihilation of the city….
One lesson about hurricanes.... they always have the potential for being worse than what they actually were....
0 likes
had it not have weakened, the surge would likely have been a few feet higher in MS and the wind in NO would have been to the point where many of the roofs where people took shelter would have been blown off, creating a much higher death toll
We are fortunate that Katrina weakened as fast as Lili did 3 years before. We are unfortunate that Katrina started out as a much more intense hurricane hough
We are fortunate that Katrina weakened as fast as Lili did 3 years before. We are unfortunate that Katrina started out as a much more intense hurricane hough
0 likes
CapeVerdeWave wrote:Why have so many storms in recent years (Isabel, Lili, Floyd, Katrina, Rita, Dennis, Ivan, Frances, etc.) tended to weaken before making landfall, whether on the Gulf coast or elsewhere?
Most of them were northern Gulf Coast landfallers, and the NGOM cannot support a Cat 4 or 5. I think Isabel encountered heavy shear and dry air. Floyd entrained dry air as well. Frances was sheared pretty bad I think.
0 likes
"Most of them were northern Gulf Coast landfallers, and the NGOM cannot support a Cat 4 or 5."
Wait, why can't the NGOM support a Cat 4 or 5??? This is erroneous thinking. Why not? There are plenty of hurricanes that get really strong (Isabel 03) over somewhat marginal water and marginal depth. Dry air isn't always a problem. Saying something with an absolute is dangerous. Camille would beg to differ. 1919 LA Cat 4 would as well. It might be harder to do and take some perfect conditions..
Wait, why can't the NGOM support a Cat 4 or 5??? This is erroneous thinking. Why not? There are plenty of hurricanes that get really strong (Isabel 03) over somewhat marginal water and marginal depth. Dry air isn't always a problem. Saying something with an absolute is dangerous. Camille would beg to differ. 1919 LA Cat 4 would as well. It might be harder to do and take some perfect conditions..
0 likes
-
- S2K Supporter
- Posts: 2777
- Joined: Fri Aug 29, 2003 10:52 am
- Location: Biloxi Beach, Ms
- Contact:
go to this web page to get the NOAA surge values
http://www.ncddc.noaa.gov/website/Katri ... viewer.htm
ranges from 28 feet from the Beau Rivage Casino in Biloxi to 28 feet in Waveland to 25 plus feet at Diamonhead on I-10...
From the 28 foot surge in Waveland to the 28 foot surge in Biloxi is about 30 miles in distance... that an incredible distance for surge to be up that high....
http://www.ncddc.noaa.gov/website/Katri ... viewer.htm
ranges from 28 feet from the Beau Rivage Casino in Biloxi to 28 feet in Waveland to 25 plus feet at Diamonhead on I-10...
From the 28 foot surge in Waveland to the 28 foot surge in Biloxi is about 30 miles in distance... that an incredible distance for surge to be up that high....
0 likes
- Audrey2Katrina
- Category 5
- Posts: 4252
- Age: 76
- Joined: Fri Dec 23, 2005 10:39 pm
- Location: Metaire, La.
did they confirm that 34.9 ft value in Pass Christian?besides that what were some other high numbers
Yup, and that was on a NOAA webpage too.. I believe the map to see that was posted in another thread... you could move it all over the coast, but there is one small area jutting out at Pass Christian that had a bona-fide 34 footer posted on it.
A2K
0 likes
Flossy 56 Audrey 57 Hilda 64* Betsy 65* Camille 69* Edith 71 Carmen 74 Bob 79 Danny 85 Elena 85 Juan 85 Florence 88 Andrew 92*, Opal 95, Danny 97, Georges 98*, Isidore 02, Lili 02, Ivan 04, Cindy 05*, Dennis 05, Katrina 05*, Gustav 08*, Isaac 12*, Nate 17, Barry 19, Cristobal 20, Marco, 20, Sally, 20, Zeta 20*, Claudette 21 IDA* 21 Francine *24
Frank P wrote:go to this web page to get the NOAA surge values
http://www.ncddc.noaa.gov/website/Katri ... viewer.htm
ranges from 28 feet from the Beau Rivage Casino in Biloxi to 28 feet in Waveland to 25 plus feet at Diamonhead on I-10...
From the 28 foot surge in Waveland to the 28 foot surge in Biloxi is about 30 miles in distance... that an incredible distance for surge to be up that high....
Man, they really need to update their map. Credibility is EVERYTHING!! They still have the Gold Shore, Lady Luck, and Biloxi Belle on the map as active casinos. All three of them went out of business long ago....
And thank goodness that 28 foot measure at the Beau didn't make it to the bay side. Otherwise, I'd have been in BIG trouble. As the crow flies, I'm only about 1.5 miles from the Beau...

0 likes
benny wrote:"Most of them were northern Gulf Coast landfallers, and the NGOM cannot support a Cat 4 or 5."
Wait, why can't the NGOM support a Cat 4 or 5??? This is erroneous thinking. Why not? There are plenty of hurricanes that get really strong (Isabel 03) over somewhat marginal water and marginal depth. Dry air isn't always a problem. Saying something with an absolute is dangerous. Camille would beg to differ. 1919 LA Cat 4 would as well. It might be harder to do and take some perfect conditions..
Shallow water
0 likes
- Extremeweatherguy
- Category 5
- Posts: 11095
- Joined: Mon Oct 10, 2005 8:13 pm
- Location: Florida
Hurricane Floyd wrote:benny wrote:"Most of them were northern Gulf Coast landfallers, and the NGOM cannot support a Cat 4 or 5."
Wait, why can't the NGOM support a Cat 4 or 5??? This is erroneous thinking. Why not? There are plenty of hurricanes that get really strong (Isabel 03) over somewhat marginal water and marginal depth. Dry air isn't always a problem. Saying something with an absolute is dangerous. Camille would beg to differ. 1919 LA Cat 4 would as well. It might be harder to do and take some perfect conditions..
Shallow water

I am going to have to disagree on this one. If it was depth that was a problem then I guess all storms would weaken before landfall because every area of the Gulf and Atlantic has a much shallower area of water before landfall. I mean take a look at west Florida! If depth was a concern, then how did Charley explode from a 125mph Cat. 2 to a 150mph Cat. 4 in just hours?
0 likes
Extremeweatherguy wrote:Hurricane Floyd wrote:benny wrote:"Most of them were northern Gulf Coast landfallers, and the NGOM cannot support a Cat 4 or 5."
Wait, why can't the NGOM support a Cat 4 or 5??? This is erroneous thinking. Why not? There are plenty of hurricanes that get really strong (Isabel 03) over somewhat marginal water and marginal depth. Dry air isn't always a problem. Saying something with an absolute is dangerous. Camille would beg to differ. 1919 LA Cat 4 would as well. It might be harder to do and take some perfect conditions..
Shallow water
I am going to have to disagree on this one. If it was depth that was a problem then I guess all storms would weaken before landfall because every area of the Gulf and Atlantic has a much shallower area of water before landfall. I mean take a look at west Florida! If depth was a concern, then how did Charley explode from a 125mph Cat. 2 to a 150mph Cat. 4 in just hours?
Charley: No sheer, No dry air, 90 degree waters.
Katrina: Shallow water, dry air, Eyewall replacement
0 likes
- skysummit
- S2K Supporter
- Posts: 5305
- Age: 49
- Joined: Tue Aug 31, 2004 11:09 pm
- Location: Ponchatoula, LA
- Contact:
For Katrina, I'm going to say upper Cat 4 at the VERY first landfall......over the SW Mississippi River Pass. Looking at Sat and Radar imagery, I'd say that's likely. It looks like her eye closed in immediately after that landfall so in New Orleans, upper Cat 1 winds, and the MGC Cat 2 with a very small area of Cat 3 winds.
As for why storms have been weakening prior to landfall, just perfect timing. It's ridiculous to think the NGOM cannot support a Cat 5.
As for why storms have been weakening prior to landfall, just perfect timing. It's ridiculous to think the NGOM cannot support a Cat 5.
0 likes
-
- S2K Supporter
- Posts: 2777
- Joined: Fri Aug 29, 2003 10:52 am
- Location: Biloxi Beach, Ms
- Contact:
Derek Ortt wrote:if fact that the NGOM cannot support a cat 5 because the cold water underneath will always be upwelled. Unless we have a QG enhanced storm like Charley (the only way it neared cat 5 status), it is just not going to happen
Gee I thought Camille was a Cat 5? and it was in the NGOM... and it happened I think, unless it was all a bad dream.... or....
unless it was downgraded to a Cat 4 recently.....
0 likes
I was warned about the HURDAT dataset that has not been reanalysed. What happened was John Hope and Charlie Neumann focused mainly on track; thus, intensities are subject to VERY LARGE error. Lets wait for the reanalysis, but there is a chance that it will lose cat 5 status (and Hugo could be awarded it) as we know that the winds start to decrease before the pressure has stopped falling in the northern GOM
0 likes
Derek Ortt wrote:I was warned about the HURDAT dataset that has not been reanalysed. What happened was John Hope and Charlie Neumann focused mainly on track; thus, intensities are subject to VERY LARGE error. Lets wait for the reanalysis, but there is a chance that it will lose cat 5 status (and Hugo could be awarded it) as we know that the winds start to decrease before the pressure has stopped falling in the northern GOM
As in Katrina was never a 5?
That would be a shocker
0 likes
Who is online
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 54 guests