HURAKAN wrote:
As you can see, Emily is very close to the 155-mph plus winds needed to be called a Super Hurricane. Even as Emily loses strength over the Yucatan Peninsula Monday, the storm will still be strong enough to re-intensify into a major hurricane once the storm emerges over the warm waters of the western Gulf of Mexico.
AccuweatherAs far as I know, we have Super Typhoons, which are cyclones with winds over 150 mph. But Super Hurricanes? According to what I know, no one uses this terminilogy for a cyclone. Except, Accuweather!!!!!
Of course...once again slaccuweather swings and misses.
I quote from the NHC 5PM discussion from yesterday afternoon, when Emily was at peak intensity, as a Category 4 hurricane at 155mph:
MAXIMUM SUSTAINED WINDS ARE NEAR 155 MPH...250 KM/HR...WITH HIGHER GUSTS. THIS MAKES EMILY A STRONG CATEGORY FOUR HURRICANE ON THE SAFFIR-SIMPSON SCALE. SOME FLUCTUATIONS IN STRENGTH ARE EXPECTED DURING THE NEXT 24 HOURS...AND EMILY COULD BECOME A CATEGORY FIVE HURRICANE AT TIMES.
Come on, guys. Seriously. If you want to call a Cat 5 hurricane a super hurricane at least get the dang wind range right. Cat 5's start, due to rounding, at 160MPH since knots are rounded to the nearest 5 knots in all official products then converted to MPH.
I realize there isn't much difference between 155 and 160...but they once again only get this part-right.
MW