I'm guessing maybe 170 or higher. Being conservative and still maybe on the low side. This thing just bomb out.

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euro6208 wrote:Perfect symmetry at landfall.
I'm guessing maybe 170 or higher. Being conservative and still maybe on the low side. This thing just bomb out.
https://i.imgur.com/OMW30EY.gif
euro6208 wrote:Perfect symmetry at landfall.
I'm guessing maybe 170 or higher. Being conservative and still maybe on the low side. This thing just bomb out.
galaxy401 wrote:euro6208 wrote:Perfect symmetry at landfall.
I'm guessing maybe 170 or higher. Being conservative and still maybe on the low side. This thing just bomb out.
170 knots and still on the low side?! Yeah....no you're just over-exaggerating. Haiyan looked more impressive when it made landfall.
Not downplaying this storm though. Very impressive how it maintained its very strong intensity all the way to landfall. Least it made landfall over a mostly remote area.
cycloneye wrote:Has anyone heard from chasers Josh and James? It has been a few hours after I posted the last tweets from them.
1900hurricane wrote:Not surprising considering landfall and all.
WAcyclone wrote:The minimum pressure recorded by the Allacapan weather station was 945 mb at 2100 UTC. However, the sustained winds from the northeast at the time were still 51 kt (94 km/h) so it may have been a bit lower between the measurement times. At 2200 UTC, the NE-winds decreased to just 18 kt (33 km/h) but the pressure went back up to 959 mb. Either way, it looks like rapid weakening commenced immediately after landfall.
dexterlabio wrote:This is probably the largest storm that made landfall, never seen a typhoon hitting Northern Luzon but the effects were felt as far south as Cebu City and even Northern Mindanao.
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