caneman wrote:wxman57 wrote:This storm is not carrying winds aloft to the surface. Should never have been upgraded. Not even a tropical storm-force sustained wind across the Tampa Bay area. Max winds peaked at around 50-55 kts yesterday at its peak.
In fairness, the core collapsed just before we would have seen those max winds. It wasn't at its closest point to us when it collapsed and once it would have got just North of us, we would have also got the tail effect which on this coast many times is the worst part. I have no problem with the upgrade. I'm certain had it not collapsed that we would have seen 70's and 80 mph's wind gusts. It was clearly ramping up as it was approaching a major metro area so better to err on the side of caution.
Power out less than one day thats how I usually measure the average wind speeds.
Max sustained winds at Buoy 42013 peaked at 42 knots around 8 PM and the core blew apart after that. There were 64 MPH gusts there which could have damaged exposed mobile homes along lake shores and bays etc and one good tornado could have made the headlines.
"More than 15,400 Tampa Electric Co. customers lost power overnight. By 7 a.m., all but about 2,000 had power restored, according to its outage map. Most were in Hillsborough County, where the company’s customer base is concentrated, as well as Pasco and Polk counties."