Cat 3 Hurricane King, per Wiki, hit Miami, and per Wiki, it was a very active season

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Frank2 wrote:Yes, but, per the tracking chart, lots of recurves, too...
Ed Mahmoud wrote:Frank2 wrote:Yes, but, per the tracking chart, lots of recurves, too...
But a couple of Florida hits, and Texas was totally off the hook. And any year with a Cat 3 in Miami, even if a bunch recurve, would be a huge year at Storm2K.
MiamiensisWx wrote:The vast majority of 1950's tropical cyclones were likely overestimated. Personally, I doubt Dog even exceeded ~115 kts, especially because of its high latitude. I think King and Easy will probably stand the test of reanalysis, although King has a better chance to maintain its Category 3 designation in Florida. Its 955 mb central pressure in Miami was well documented, and most information indicates that this compact storm intensified rapidly prior to landfall. I think King was a solid Category 3 over land, probably near ~100 kts.
CrazyC83 wrote:MiamiensisWx wrote:The vast majority of 1950's tropical cyclones were likely overestimated. Personally, I doubt Dog even exceeded ~115 kts, especially because of its high latitude. I think King and Easy will probably stand the test of reanalysis, although King has a better chance to maintain its Category 3 designation in Florida. Its 955 mb central pressure in Miami was well documented, and most information indicates that this compact storm intensified rapidly prior to landfall. I think King was a solid Category 3 over land, probably near ~100 kts.
Also that 13 is probably a very low estimate for the number of tropical storms, I think it was more like 19 (with the rest out at sea).
I agree, Dog seems weird at 160 kt so far out, the only way that would be possible IMO is if it went annular while already a Cat 5. If it had that intensity out there it would probably have had a pressure around 904mb. I certainly wouldn't rule out it being a Cat 5 (it was not far from where Isabel reached such), but to go that intense seems far-fetched. If it maintained Cat 5 until 30°N, it was almost certainly an annular hurricane.
BTW, the only other listed Category 5 hurricanes in the open Atlantic (i.e. not in the Caribbean or Gulf and east of 70°W) were Easy (1951), Cleo (1958), Donna, Hugo and Isabel. There may have been a few others though, but not many - the only potential candidates IMO are Carol (1953), Carrie (1957) and Esther (1961).
Ed Mahmoud wrote:Grady Norton's 1950 season post-mortem (pdf of an old document)
I noticed there is another thread about long cold cycle ENSO events (I'd write out the popular name but the standard "ñ' doesn't make an enya) and active hurricane seasons that occur during/shortly after.
Interesting stuff.
Cryomaniac wrote:Ed Mahmoud wrote:Grady Norton's 1950 season post-mortem (pdf of an old document)
I noticed there is another thread about long cold cycle ENSO events (I'd write out the popular name but the standard "ñ' doesn't make an enya) and active hurricane seasons that occur during/shortly after.
Interesting stuff.
You can get a ñ from the character map. =)