otowntiger wrote:It would be quite rare for that to happen, although I guess one certainly could argue that the track of this thing is quite rare. I don't see this storm strengthening that much. It may become a major before landfall, but my gut tells me it is not going to do it. In my opinion, I don't think Austin will see 90 mph winds from this. A lot of things would have to come together for that to happen making the odds very much against it. It would have to strengthen remarkably, it would have to track just right, it would have to be going pretty fast (so as not to deteriorate as quickly) for that kind of an event to ocurr. Not saying its impossible but certainly improbable. By the way those exact conditions did occur in Baton Rouge during Gustav, sustained winds in the 60's and 91 mph gusts, but that hadn't happened since Betsty in '65 and BR is at least 100 miles closer to the gulf than Austin.
Tiger, while it's good to think positive, the thing is, the atmostpheric conditions out in the Gulf don't support your idea of your belief of you not thinking that this will strengthen much. I mean, to me, it already looks better than Gustav did when it emerged from Cuba as far as structure goes(even though I know Gustav was stronger), and also, the fact that the convection is ALREADY getting going and the eyewall is starting to look better, that should tell you something. Also remember that the NHC is often conservative in their intensity outlook. Don't be suprised that if this ramps up quicker that the NHC raises the intensity forecast to peak somewhere in CAT4 range instead of 3....... Remember, this isn't Gustav, as the conditions for Gustave weren't that good at all. This suppose to have some shear, but not strong shear to keep it from strengthening... I just can't see robust stregthening NOT happening. It would go against everything I ever learned about hurricanes and their environment....