Alyono wrote:Time_Zone wrote:I respect your opinion but with all due respect I don't really consider a 25KT increase in 24 or so hours to be "slow and steady development" considering the threshold for RI is 30 KTS in 24.
The 30 KT is NOT the classical definition. It is a proxy used in operations since ops focuses on wind and not pressure
RI is something very rare... and EI is even rarer
I just looked at a couple AMS papers that used wind. One defined it as 30 knots in a day is Rapid Intensification, and 40 knots is "Very Rapid Intensification". While I agree there is no "standard" definition, I disagree with the use of pressure. If the pressure rapidly drops from 1000 mb to 980 mb, but the winds don't catch up before landfall, then wind won't be so bad for those on the ground. In reverse, if winds go from 65 knots to 100 knots, the degree of damage is significantly more! So do you go with pressure, which in the end has almost zero affect on someone's boat or house (excluding pressure driven winds by a nearby cold front or high pressure, which is NOT directly related to the TC itself), or do you use wind, which is what really destroys property and kills people?
I'm not arguing the reasoning behind why they use pressure, it can be "cleaner", but how many times have we seen a rapid drop in pressure and it takes 4 to 6 hours for the winds to catch up? As someone who has lived in a hurricane zone, I'd be much more worried about that 30 knot, or even 25 knot, jump in wind speed, than a 10 mb pressure fall.