Derek Ortt wrote:it normally is 90%, but only if there is high ocean heat content near the land, like Miami, or the Caribbean. At Cuba, Charley was actually 105%
I do not believe NWS in the center of New Orleans recorded cat 3 sustained from Betsy as the highest readings I have seen were 105 m.p.h. gusts, but cat 3 sustained at Grand Isle
Here's a little information from the report on Betsy in the TPC archives...
Winds estimated to be 150 mph
Winds of 70 to 105 mph with gusts of 160 mph at Grand Isle at 5 pm CST on Sep. 9 (landfall took place 5 hours later near Grand Isle)
Winds gusting to over 100 mph at Pilottown at the same time
Winds exceeded 100 mph in New Orleans by 10:20 CST
Winds reached 125 mph at 10:48 pm when the power failed
The eye moved over Houma between midnight and 1 am and produced wind gusts over 130 mph and a pressure of 28.00 inches.
At Thibodaux, the pressure fell to 28.02 inches and winds gusted to .
The storm still maintained 100 mph winds as it passed west of Baton Rouge.
That information can be found here ftp://ftp.nhc.noaa.gov/pub/storm_archiv ... elim08.gif
I have a copy of a report issued by the then Weather Bureau in New Orleans. Here are some peak wind gusts in LA according to that report:
Amite 110
Baldwin 100
Carville 130
Covington 100
Grand Isle 160+
Hammond 115
Melville 90
Monroe 61
Morgan City 128
New Iberia 85
New Orleans:
WB City Office 125 (incomplete record)
Moisant 112
Causeway 105+
Huey Long Bridge 128
New Roads 100
Port Sulphur 166
Pilottown 120+ (Sustained)
For Mississippi...
Bay St. Louis 80
Columbia 67
McComb 63
The lowest pressure measured at both Grand Isle and Houma, which is a good way to the NW of Grand Isle was 28.00 inches and at Thibodaux, even farther inland, 28.02 inches.
Per the report in the newspaper (can't remember if it was the State Times or the Advocate, have to look it up again), winds in and around Baton Rouge reached 100 to 120 mph (gusts no doubt).








