Hurricane2022 wrote:It doesn't make much difference whether Lee makes landfall as a large Category 1 hurricane or an extratropical cyclone with winds in over 75+ mph. The impacts will likely be the same and as already mentioned, post-tropical cyclones can cause many effects as if they were still tropical, like Sandy that devastated NY and places near and far, and also like Ida, despite being weak on land, produced tornadoes that were devastating, and like Merbok, which caused some significant damage to Alaska as an strong Ex-TC, and like FIONA, which was a catastrophe to Canada in last year, and several other cyclones that were destructive in different places despite no longer being tropical cyclones. We must always be attentive to the facts, as these things can easily end forests, cities, properties and even lives, if we do not take the due care and attention that has been requested by our local meteorological agency and other institutions.

I'm not sure if this is directed towards me, but if it is I think you're most certainly misunderstanding my posts.
I've been through several hurricanes in Atlantic Canada(Igor and Juan being the two most noteworthy) and neither held a candle to post tropical Fiona, which I also experienced in Eastern Nova Scotia last September.
Not all extra-tropical systems are equal, the current message from professionals in the Maritimes is that this is unlikely to be nearly as impactful as Dorian, Fiona is in its own category.
Truth be told I was looking towards chasing down Lee as well, that's very unlikely to transpire after the recent western and weaker trend from the models. The main difference between a system like Fiona is it phased with the trough coming onshore, Lee is looking to phase significantly offshore and then rapidly weaken on approach.