HURAKAN wrote:It's possible the pressure hasn't been able to catch the winds. It should continue to drop.
Winds catch up to pressure, not the other way around.
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You are posting false information. The NHC is the authority and the official motion of Hurricane Felix is stated by forecaster Pasch of the NHC at 4pm.Derek Ortt wrote:recon is NOT finding a WNW motion... and Wxman has a motion of 280
I know some here desperately want to be in this thing (they have never been in one)... but lets not spread the misinfo regarding this by saying it is moving north of where it really is
So are you implying that the NHC is giving us false information Derek? Why would the 5pm advisory say that it is "continuing" to move at 285˚ when it really isn't? That doesn't make much sense to me considering the NHC must be studying this system like a hawk, right?Derek Ortt wrote:recon is NOT finding a WNW motion... and Wxman has a motion of 280
I know some here desperately want to be in this thing (they have never been in one)... but lets not spread the misinfo regarding this by saying it is moving north of where it really is
Derek Ortt wrote:Dean hit a swamp in Mexico north of Chetumal
belize has far higher population
Still... it is incredible how most here do not seem to care or understand what is likely to happen to Honduras... they are focused right on that NHC center line (which may still be slightly to the north initially) into Belize
Yeh but making landfall as a 5 is hard in itself. For 2 to make landfall within 150miles or so of each other in a few weeks is crazy.CrazyC83 wrote:Katrina and Rita almost crossed paths while both were Cat 5...
Scorpion wrote:Felix will have gone from an TD to a Cat 4 in just over 36 hours. Does anyone know the record for this deepening? This is 1935 Labor Day stuff.
hurricanefloyd5 wrote:Scorpion wrote:Felix will have gone from an TD to a Cat 4 in just over 36 hours. Does anyone know the record for this deepening? This is 1935 Labor Day stuff.
the record for the largest drop n pressure is 100 mb in 24hours i think!!! can someone confimr that please????
hurricanefloyd5 wrote:Scorpion wrote:Felix will have gone from an TD to a Cat 4 in just over 36 hours. Does anyone know the record for this deepening? This is 1935 Labor Day stuff.
the record for the largest drop n pressure is 100 mb in 24hours i think!!! can someone confimr that please????
hurricanefloyd5 wrote:Scorpion wrote:Felix will have gone from an TD to a Cat 4 in just over 36 hours. Does anyone know the record for this deepening? This is 1935 Labor Day stuff.
the record for the largest drop n pressure is 100 mb in 24hours i think!!! can someone confimr that please????
Portastorm wrote:Derek Ortt wrote:Dean hit a swamp in Mexico north of Chetumal
belize has far higher population
Still... it is incredible how most here do not seem to care or understand what is likely to happen to Honduras... they are focused right on that NHC center line (which may still be slightly to the north initially) into Belize
Derek, I think its more of the latter. I was assuming Felix would skim the northern coastline at worst ... and yes, Honduras would experience the full brunt. Is that northern coastline heavily populated?
wxmann_91 wrote:hurricanefloyd5 wrote:Scorpion wrote:Felix will have gone from an TD to a Cat 4 in just over 36 hours. Does anyone know the record for this deepening? This is 1935 Labor Day stuff.
the record for the largest drop n pressure is 100 mb in 24hours i think!!! can someone confimr that please????
It is. STY Forrest (1983; WPAC) holds the record, with Wilma (2005; ATL) coming in at a close second w/ 98 mb/24 hr.
Felix will not even come close to the record. But it is deepening quite rapidly.
CrazyC83 wrote:wxmann_91 wrote:hurricanefloyd5 wrote:
the record for the largest drop n pressure is 100 mb in 24hours i think!!! can someone confimr that please????
It is. STY Forrest (1983; WPAC) holds the record, with Wilma (2005; ATL) coming in at a close second w/ 98 mb/24 hr.
Felix will not even come close to the record. But it is deepening quite rapidly.
The ambient pressures in the area are quite high too, so Felix should not break any pressure records at this point unless the winds reach well past 200 mph...
Extremeweatherguy wrote:So are you implying that the NHC is giving us false information Derek? Why would the 5pm advisory say that it is "continuing" to move at 285˚ when it really isn't? That doesn't make much sense to me considering the NHC must be studying this system like a hawk, right?Derek Ortt wrote:recon is NOT finding a WNW motion... and Wxman has a motion of 280
I know some here desperately want to be in this thing (they have never been in one)... but lets not spread the misinfo regarding this by saying it is moving north of where it really is
wxmann_91 wrote:That is correct... and that is partially the reason why the central pressure is so high relative to the winds right now.
I don't see this going below 910 mb, really.
Portastorm wrote:OK, I did my own research. The northeastern part of Honduras is primarily what is called a lowland jungle (La Mosquitia) ... however, the three "departments" that cover the northern coastline have about 750,000 people living there, including an island chain north of the coast where some 43,000 people live. That's a lot of folks in harms way!
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Honduras
ronjon wrote:Anyone care to speculate on what effect a rapidly developing tropical cyclone off the GA/FL coast would have on the future path of Felix? I was on another site and a very knowledgeable poster indicated that this would seriously weaken the ridge that is currently steering Felix.
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