#3766 Postby Audrey2Katrina » Wed Oct 10, 2018 2:00 pm
tolakram wrote:Audrey2Katrina wrote:1 "Labor Day" 1935 892 mbar (hPa)
2 Camille 1969 900 mbar (hPa)
tie Gilbert 1988 900 mb (hPa)
4 Dean 2007 905 mbar (hPa)
5 "Cuba" 1924 910 mbar (hPa)
6 Janet 1955 914 mbar (hPa)
tie Irma 2017 914 mbar (hPa)
8 "Cuba" 1932 918 mbar (hPa)
9 Michael 2018 919 mbar (hPa)
Unless latest stats change THIS is the official ranking of most intense landfalling pressure/hurricanes.
Some were discussing, and tweeting, pressure at landfall. Katrina made landfall at 920mb but of course just looking at a single stat is meaningless.
I wouldn't exactly call it "meaningless" since it obviously has meaning. But I would concur that you couldn't make any generalizations from that since there are so many other factors to consider, including wind speeds, size of the storm, extent of hurricane winds, extent of tropical storm winds, and impact which has many variables in and of itself.
0 likes
Flossy 56 Audrey 57 Hilda 64* Betsy 65* Camille 69* Edith 71 Carmen 74 Bob 79 Danny 85 Elena 85 Juan 85 Florence 88 Andrew 92*, Opal 95, Danny 97, Georges 98*, Isidore 02, Lili 02, Ivan 04, Cindy 05*, Dennis 05, Katrina 05*, Gustav 08*, Isaac 12*, Nate 17, Barry 19, Cristobal 20, Marco, 20, Sally, 20, Zeta 20*, Claudette 21 IDA* 21 Francine *24