Will Wilma be retired?
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Snowzealot
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Will Wilma be retired?
Ok, you know someone would ask it anyway, so let's just ask it now. Even if Wilma fizzles into a tropical depression tomorrow, will her name be retired solely based on her record low pressure?
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Coredesat
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Stratosphere747
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100feettstormsurge
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Re: Will Wilma be retired?
Snowzealot wrote:Ok, you know someone would ask it anyway, so let's just ask it now. Even if Wilma fizzles into a tropical depression tomorrow, will her name be retired solely based on her record low pressure?
Is the Pope German?
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- Tri-State_1925
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Air Force Met
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smashmode wrote:If Wilma is a cat 1..No.
If Wilma dissipates into an open wave in the next 48 hours she will still be retired (she won't dissipate). There is NO doubt at all.
This is the biggest no-brainer of the year. The lowest pressure recorded in the basin is going to be retired...even if it was a fish and bothered no one. It doesn't need to be a major hurricane striking land to be retired. To say otherwise shows a lack of understanding in what they consider when retiring a storm.
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cjrciadt wrote:You have to make landfall as a major cane most of the time to be retired, but ask me again one week from now.
I believe Tropical Storm Alison was retired in 2001
And yes she will be retired....as the most powerful storm in the Atlantic, even if she totally dissipates from here on out
Its very rare you get a sub 900MB Storm...the last one we got before Rita was Gilbert in 1988...17 years ago.....they just don't happen very often....so again yes definite retirement in my opinion
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jaxfladude
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Here's another question along the same lines: Do they need to retire Wilma? I mean, it's been some 73 years since we got to the 'W' storm. Chances are they could leave it on the list, and no one would ever see the name again in their lifetime (even if we get to the 'W' storm in another year, there is only a 1/6 chance it would be named Wilma again if they don't retire Wilma, which of course they will.)
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