HouTXmetro wrote:Windy wrote:I think it's interesting that people get so focused on the category numbers. A small CAT 4 storm is a very big deal for whereever it landfalls. A Cat 2 storm with Cat 2 winds 110 miles away from center and TS winds nearly a few hundred miles away is HUGE storm that spanks an ENORMOUS swath of land with wind and surge, and for a much longer time. What makes a storm a Cat 2 or a Cat 4 is only the maximum sustained winds, which usually only extend out a small distance from the center or circulation. In this storm, the max winds extend waaaaaaaay beyond what I think most people are used to. It is quite possible you could be sitting on the TX/LA border very late Friday night and getting sustained CAT 2 winds and surge... until nearly mid Saturday! I actually HOPE this tightens up into a Cat 3/4 and brings the wind field in a bit, or a lot of people are going to be surprised and in serious trouble at landfall.
This is obviously not a forecast; don't rely on me, rely on trained weather professionals, yadda yadda yadda.
People closer to the eye do not want this to tighten up and strengthen.
But I think Windy is right. Arguably most of the damage done with a major hurricane is the surge. As far as surge goes, this hurricane may not provide the highest amplitude you would expect from a storm with pressure in the 940s, but the real estate it covers could very well more than make up for that. I think in that sense Ike is kind of a stealth storm because people just think cat 2 and aren't really aware how far its reaches are. It's even more dangerous with people unaware. Someone posted an image snapped in Dauphin Island, Alabama this morning with water totally covering the streets already, and not a cloud in the sky.
But yeah, within 50 miles of the center, it wouldn't be a good thing to see it tighten up. I hope for anyone from Corpus to Galveston/Houston that it doesn't.