
Another piece of bad news, Galveston only calling Vol.evacs. I'm shocked given the chance that Ike could wobble north of the NHC track and slam into that reigon as a huge major hurricane.
Moderator: S2k Moderators
dwg71 wrote:Charley was a Cat 5, the most intense hurricane to ever make landfall in US, not the same storm as IKe
HURAKAN wrote:dwg71 wrote:Charley was a Cat 5, the most intense hurricane to ever make landfall in US, not the same storm as IKe
Category 4: 150 mph. The Labor Day Hurricane in 1935, pressure 892 mb, was the most intense.
Hurricanewatcher2007 wrote:Just to let every one know Fox13weather's comment was directed at me. I do not consider my self an amature when it comes to weather. I have been forecasting and studying since I was in 4th grade. I might not have gone to college to become a pro but I have dedicated my life to weather education, learning, and helping others in disasters. I am a redcross volunteer both locally and nationally and I have taking many courses on natural disasters. My friends and family all trust my forecasting skills and I hope that even though I am no pro I hope one day you all will as well. My comment I made that Fox13weather got mad at I did not put a disclaimer on but I would think considering it wasn't just me but also a pro-met saying the same thing that it would have had more to back it up then just me saying it and it wouldn't need a disclaimer but for now on I will make sure I put one on every post I make. If we had signatures on here still I would put it in my signature!
Now this will be the last post I make about this subject. I am sorry if I made any one mad.
USTropics wrote:This is just a quick way to estimate storm surge based on pressure, not always accurate but uses the average of 52 storms that made landfall.
Using 1013mb as your starting point you then find the difference from the current pressure of the system. Ike is currently at 946 so:
1013-946=67
you then divide this by 4 to get your peak storm surge which is:
67/4=16.75 feet
This does not account for wave height (there is a formula for wave height as well: 1013mb-946mb=67 X .2 = 13.4 meters; and there is 3.28 feet in a meter so 13.4 X 3.28ft = 43.95ft). It also does not account for radius to maximum winds, forward speed, or angle of approach to coastline but does give a rough estimate.
dwg71 wrote:Charley was a Cat 5, the most intense hurricane to ever make landfall in US, not the same storm as IKe
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 4 guests