jpigott wrote:chrisnnavarre - what makes you think this will make landfall in South Florida and not the Keys
Four Words....
Rapid Deepening, Poleward Motion
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jpigott wrote:chrisnnavarre - what makes you think this will make landfall in South Florida and not the Keys
chrisnnavarre wrote:jpigott wrote:chrisnnavarre - what makes you think this will make landfall in South Florida and not the Keys
Four Words....
Rapid Deepening, Poleward Motion
FlSteel wrote:chrisnnavarre: from looking at the last visibles today, and the latest IR I see no indication that this is going NW into mainland Fl. If anything Rita looks like she is tracking just south of the NHC projected track yet in the following the predicted direction.
Brent: I agree, this storm looks like its beginning to really get cranked up
vaffie wrote:Do you guys realize that, according to this website that predicts hurricane damage, even if Rita hit just to the west of Houston as a Category 3 storm, as NHC currently predicts, Calcasieu Parish in Louisiana, where Lake Charles is, would still have 20 million dollars worth of wind damage!
http://hurricane.methaz.org/hurapak/AAL ... terep.html
vaffie wrote:Do you guys realize that, according to this website that predicts hurricane damage, even if Rita hit just to the west of Houston as a Category 3 storm, as NHC currently predicts, Calcasieu Parish in Louisiana, where Lake Charles is, would still have 20 million dollars worth of wind damage!
http://hurricane.methaz.org/hurapak/AAL ... terep.html
Jagno wrote:vaffie wrote:Do you guys realize that, according to this website that predicts hurricane damage, even if Rita hit just to the west of Houston as a Category 3 storm, as NHC currently predicts, Calcasieu Parish in Louisiana, where Lake Charles is, would still have 20 million dollars worth of wind damage!
http://hurricane.methaz.org/hurapak/AAL ... terep.html
Since this is exactly where I am located......the southwestern most part.....this post scares the hell out of me
chrisnnavarre wrote:The stronger the storm gets the more poleward it moves....
Anywhere on the mainland of Florida is going to slow it and other influences will take over.
Before it's over this storm is going, I think to the Mississippi/Alabama border if not more to the north and east.
It's been since the 1950's (someone posted) since a major storm has hit Texas in September.
I'd be willing to bet models will adjust once this storm makes initial landfall.
The latest UW-CIMSS satellite intensity estimate puts Rita as a 80 mph hurricane with a 982 mb central pressure. Radar imagery from Camaguey, Cuba shows a partially formed elliptical eyewall, open to the north.
boca_chris wrote:The long range NWS Miami radar is showing an eye like feature just SSE of Andros but it appears to be wobbling NW. Can anybody confirm this?
http://radar.weather.gov/radar/loop/DS.p20-r/si.kamx.shtml
boca_chris wrote:The long range NWS Miami radar is showing an eye like feature just SSE of Andros but it appears to be wobbling NW. Can anybody confirm this?
http://radar.weather.gov/radar/loop/DS.p20-r/si.kamx.shtml
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