question on Camille and Andrew canes
Moderator: S2k Moderators
Forum rules
The posts in this forum are NOT official forecasts and should not be used as such. They are just the opinion of the poster and may or may not be backed by sound meteorological data. They are NOT endorsed by any professional institution or STORM2K. For official information, please refer to products from the National Hurricane Center and National Weather Service.
question on Camille and Andrew canes
This is an excerpt I found on a website about Camille that was in a thread here.
*************************************
Several sources consider Hurricane Camille the largest single act of destruction in United States history (until Hurricane Andrew in 1992). To this day, Camille remains the most extreme meteorological event to take place in North America. Although there is some question as to the total death toll, the best estimates are - 255 people killed, and 8,900 injured. A number of people (50 - 75) were never found. Nearly 14,000 housing units were damaged, and 6,000 others were totally destroyed (Coburn 1977). The total damage from Camille was $4.2 billion ( in 1969 dollars). As of the 2001 hurricane season, Camille remains the most intense hurricane to enter the United States mainland.
******************************************
Now question: What was Andrew a 4 or 5? And anyone have any pics of that hurricane?
*************************************
Several sources consider Hurricane Camille the largest single act of destruction in United States history (until Hurricane Andrew in 1992). To this day, Camille remains the most extreme meteorological event to take place in North America. Although there is some question as to the total death toll, the best estimates are - 255 people killed, and 8,900 injured. A number of people (50 - 75) were never found. Nearly 14,000 housing units were damaged, and 6,000 others were totally destroyed (Coburn 1977). The total damage from Camille was $4.2 billion ( in 1969 dollars). As of the 2001 hurricane season, Camille remains the most intense hurricane to enter the United States mainland.
******************************************
Now question: What was Andrew a 4 or 5? And anyone have any pics of that hurricane?
0 likes
Re: question on Camille and Andrew canes
Andrew was upgraded after the season due to the damage inflicted.mkapw wrote:This is an excerpt I found on a website about Camille that was in a thread here.
*************************************
Several sources consider Hurricane Camille the largest single act of destruction in United States history (until Hurricane Andrew in 1992). To this day, Camille remains the most extreme meteorological event to take place in North America. Although there is some question as to the total death toll, the best estimates are - 255 people killed, and 8,900 injured. A number of people (50 - 75) were never found. Nearly 14,000 housing units were damaged, and 6,000 others were totally destroyed (Coburn 1977). The total damage from Camille was $4.2 billion ( in 1969 dollars). As of the 2001 hurricane season, Camille remains the most intense hurricane to enter the United States mainland.
******************************************
Now question: What was Andrew a 4 or 5? And anyone have any pics of that hurricane?
BTW, look at http://www.geocities.com/hurricanene/hu ... amille.htm for an example of a Cat-V example of total destruction...the pictures define CAT-V.
Richard
0 likes
Re: question on Camille and Andrew canes
Dupe deleted
Last edited by ricreig on Thu Sep 09, 2004 8:04 am, edited 1 time in total.
0 likes
-
ColdWaterConch
- Tropical Storm

- Posts: 146
- Joined: Thu Sep 18, 2003 12:08 pm
- Location: Pittsburgh, PA (formerly KW, FL)
http://www.noaa.gov/hurricaneandrew.html
Discusses the reassessment of Andrew.
As for pics, come on over to my house and we can go through a couple of boxes of them over a beer.
Discusses the reassessment of Andrew.
As for pics, come on over to my house and we can go through a couple of boxes of them over a beer.
0 likes
-
TPACane04
Andrew was originally a 4, but upgraded to 5 status after review of damage, wind assessments, etc
You bring up an interesting comparison....Camille was a killer due to unprecedented storm surge (Andrew had surge, but nothing like Camille)
Both had very high winds (170+) but Camille bit lower pressure.
I would say this....if a Camille-like storm hit the GC today, it would easily be the most devastating in terms of economic impact, regardless of strike area (unless it hit FL Big Bend)...a direct hit to NO, Biloxi, Mobile, Panama City and especially Tampa Bay would be a 20-40 billion dollar storm.
You bring up an interesting comparison....Camille was a killer due to unprecedented storm surge (Andrew had surge, but nothing like Camille)
Both had very high winds (170+) but Camille bit lower pressure.
I would say this....if a Camille-like storm hit the GC today, it would easily be the most devastating in terms of economic impact, regardless of strike area (unless it hit FL Big Bend)...a direct hit to NO, Biloxi, Mobile, Panama City and especially Tampa Bay would be a 20-40 billion dollar storm.
0 likes
The NHC called Andrew a 4, until post analysis 10 years later determined that it was in fact a 5. There are great write ups on Andrew and on the "post" meeting that changed it from a 4 to a 5 at the NHC:
The overall write up:
http://www.nhc.noaa.gov/1992andrew.html
I can't find the link to the meeting minutes right now. Will post them later if I find. Also on the NHC site.
The overall write up:
http://www.nhc.noaa.gov/1992andrew.html
I can't find the link to the meeting minutes right now. Will post them later if I find. Also on the NHC site.
0 likes
-
ColdWaterConch
- Tropical Storm

- Posts: 146
- Joined: Thu Sep 18, 2003 12:08 pm
- Location: Pittsburgh, PA (formerly KW, FL)
TPACane04 wrote:Andrew was originally a 4, but upgraded to 5 status after review of damage, wind assessments, etc
You bring up an interesting comparison....Camille was a killer due to unprecedented storm surge (Andrew had surge, but nothing like Camille)
Both had very high winds (170+) but Camille bit lower pressure.
I would say this....if a Camille-like storm hit the GC today, it would easily be the most devastating in terms of economic impact, regardless of strike area (unless it hit FL Big Bend)...a direct hit to NO, Biloxi, Mobile, Panama City and especially Tampa Bay would be a 20-40 billion dollar storm.
I personally do not agree with the post-mortem upgrade of Andrew.
If they are going to go back and review one, then they should for all.
All of the tools they used said 4 at landfall. Yes, Andrew was horrible and did a great deal of damage, but I don't like changing the rules of the "game".
0 likes
- Hurrilurker
- Category 2

- Posts: 738
- Joined: Mon Jun 09, 2003 3:32 pm
- Location: San Francisco, CA
ColdWaterConch wrote:google hurricane andrew pictures
http://www.photolib.noaa.gov/historic/nws/andy1.html
0 likes
- Tri-State_1925
- Category 1

- Posts: 341
- Joined: Fri Aug 13, 2004 11:16 am
- Location: Worcester Hills, MA
The reassessment of Andrew is troublesome. Instead of continuing to explore previously unseen, localized circumstances that may have caused a storm with estimated sustained 145 mph winds to create so much damage, they made a broad stroke justification of the damage by simply increasing the winds by 20 mph. Doesn't lend much to scientific exploration if you ask me.
I agree with the previous post. If the technology was underestimating the strength of storms in 1992, then other storms were "shortchanged" as well. Go back and increase the winds of Hugo and others.
I agree with the previous post. If the technology was underestimating the strength of storms in 1992, then other storms were "shortchanged" as well. Go back and increase the winds of Hugo and others.
0 likes
- FloridaDiver
- Tropical Storm

- Posts: 125
- Joined: Thu Aug 26, 2004 12:35 pm
- Location: Palm Beach, Florida
- Contact:
Cat What?
Tri-State_1925 wrote:The reassessment of Andrew is troublesome. Instead of continuing to explore previously unseen, localized circumstances that may have caused a storm with estimated sustained 145 mph winds to create so much damage, they made a broad stroke justification of the damage by simply increasing the winds by 20 mph. Doesn't lend much to scientific exploration if you ask me.
I agree with the previous post. If the technology was underestimating the strength of storms in 1992, then other storms were "shortchanged" as well. Go back and increase the winds of Hugo and others.
This is a weird thread, who really cares if Andrew was a Cat 4 or Cat 5? The pictures of the devastation in Southern Dade County should be more then enough to clarify the true strength of that storm. Ask the Insurance companies who paid out the record billions of dollars in damages if they care if Andrew was a Cat 4 or Cat 5? Ask those who lived though Andrew if they care what the final “classification” is. I lived it, and I have classified Andrew using my one “naming convention” however, due to censorship and keeping the moderators of this board happy, I can not post my true feelings (aka classification) of what Andrew really was.
0 likes
I too, think an injustice is done if storms are recategorized for political or other purposes.
With all due respect to the devastation caused by Hurricane Andrew...He was NOT on the same level as Camille.
Andrew had peak gusts of 164 MPH according to NOAA. Pleas see:
http://www.nhc.noaa.gov/HAW2/english/history.shtml
According to NHC estimates, and I say estimates because Camille DESTROYED all of the barometric recording devices in the area, Camille sustained winds of 190 MPH with much higher gusts.
The photos of Camille "rubble" are not of mobile homes, but houses removed from their foundations and destroyed bya 25-30 foot wave of water.
With all due respect to the devastation caused by Hurricane Andrew...He was NOT on the same level as Camille.
Andrew had peak gusts of 164 MPH according to NOAA. Pleas see:
http://www.nhc.noaa.gov/HAW2/english/history.shtml
According to NHC estimates, and I say estimates because Camille DESTROYED all of the barometric recording devices in the area, Camille sustained winds of 190 MPH with much higher gusts.
The photos of Camille "rubble" are not of mobile homes, but houses removed from their foundations and destroyed bya 25-30 foot wave of water.
0 likes
Who is online
Users browsing this forum: mitchell and 48 guests





