vbhoutex wrote:Kessler AFB reported a wind gust of 220 mph during Camille before the anemometer and everything else there blew away. That has been documented and disputed both so I can't verify it one way or another.
I was in Pensacola(actually Gulf Breeze, during Camille. She was not what I consider a compact storm. We had sustained winds in P'cola, if I am remembering correctly, of 80 mph with gusts to 100 mph. I really don't know where to go to verify that. I also know what I witnessed during and after Camille. Our maple type trees in our yard were stripped of their leaves as were many others. I saw homes 2 miles inland that were blown off their foundations in Pass Christian, in the aftermath. I saw entire forests laid flat, at least 60 miles inland(since you couldn't get along the coast for almost a month) and saw huge steel signs laid down like Spaghetti in the same area the forests were laid flat. I have no doubt that Camilles winds were at least 190 mph at landfall, but like everyone else here I have no way of proving it. We had an 8' storms surge in Gulf Breeze, and from our vantage point facing Santa Rosa Island(P'cola Beach) we watched 40' waves washing clear across the island. Just reporting what I saw and experienced. BTW, can someone post a really good place to go to do verification of winds, etc. for any storm?
See your account is what I have heard most about Camille, that it was a large storm more similar to Ivan than a hurricane Andrew. If it was really that large than there is absolutely no way that Camille had 200 mph winds or even 190 mph winds, as the big hurricanes Gilbert and Allen coulnt reach 200 with lower pressures. It would have had to have been Charley's size to produce 200 mph winds at that pressure.
As for damage, sorry I have yet to see wind damage from Camille like that of Andrew. The vegetation and trees I have seen in the Camille damage photos show trees that largely in fact have their vegetation with them....
Couple of examples...
http://www.photolib.noaa.gov/historic/n ... a00406.jpg
Biloxi - Trees still have their vegetation for the most part.
http://www.photolib.noaa.gov/historic/n ... a02406.jpg
Gulfport - Lots of trees still have their vegetation but then again lots are stripped bare and flattened....I believe that building was destroyed by a combo of winds and surge.
http://www.photolib.noaa.gov/historic/n ... a02400.jpg
MS Coast - this is a famous one I believe of the condo or apartment that got leveled? Again this is surge damage obviously as the lone survivor in the building reported floating out of the second story before the building fell....Again notice that LOTS of the trees still have vegetation.
Now, lets see some Andrew photos.
http://flare.creighton.edu/martinelli/a ... andrew.jpg
Speaks for itself, pure wind damage and nothing left. All trees flattened and no vegetation can be seen on any left standing. This looks to be a mobile home park I think...so yes the buildings werent that strong.
http://www.lima.ohio-state.edu/academic ... damage.JPG
No foilage left...trees completely stripped bare.
http://dept.kent.edu/geography/Dymon/andrew%203.jpg
Sparse Vegetation left on trees...but homes seem to have fared better than most did in the storm.
Point is that wind damage from Camille is no worse than it is from Andrew, so there is no way you can call Camille a 200 mph hurricane and not have it have wind damage greated than that of Andrew.