
Oh, and I'll respectfully make the same request Floyd did--please keep it civil

A2K
Moderator: S2k Moderators
CrazyC83 wrote:I haven't really analyzed Rita yet, but it seems 115 makes sense.
A CAT 2 HURRICANE WILL LEVEL ANYTHING IN ITS PATH. PLEASE DO NOT THINK THAT A 2 IS NOT A CATASTROPHE
Derek Ortt wrote:wind swere likely no higher than 105 m.p.h. from Rita. The fact that it caused 10 billion in damage as a 2 should not be a surprie after seeing Hatteras nearly leveled by a cat 2 hurricane
A CAT 2 HURRICANE WILL LEVEL ANYTHING IN ITS PATH. PLEASE DO NOT THINK THAT A 2 IS NOT A CATASTROPHE
Derek Ortt wrote:wind swere likely no higher than 105 m.p.h. from Rita. The fact that it caused 10 billion in damage as a 2 should not be a surprie after seeing Hatteras nearly leveled by a cat 2 hurricane
A CAT 2 HURRICANE WILL LEVEL ANYTHING IN ITS PATH. PLEASE DO NOT THINK THAT A 2 IS NOT A CATASTROPHE
Derek Ortt wrote:wind swere likely no higher than 105 m.p.h. from Rita. The fact that it caused 10 billion in damage as a 2 should not be a surprie after seeing Hatteras nearly leveled by a cat 2 hurricane
A CAT 2 HURRICANE WILL LEVEL ANYTHING IN ITS PATH. PLEASE DO NOT THINK THAT A 2 IS NOT A CATASTROPHE
Audrey2Katrina wrote:A CAT 2 HURRICANE WILL LEVEL ANYTHING IN ITS PATH. PLEASE DO NOT THINK THAT A 2 IS NOT A CATASTROPHE
Heck, I believe Allison showed that a TS can do an awful lot of damage!
A2K
So Alison wasn't even a TS or a TD when it produced over $5 billion in damage across the city.
Port Arthur is not "well inland", but it was slightly left of the center.benny wrote:I really disagree with all of you at landfall (at least 50%) or so. There was a confirmed tower on the left side of the circulation with 82 kt gusting to 101 kt in Port Arthur. This site is well inland and on the left side of the circulation. I have made this point before... but it had to be a lot higher on the east side of the system... and taking into account the storm motion and the change in exposure from open terrain to marine right on the coast.. 100 kt seems very good to me.
Well if that is what the SS scale says about Cat. 2 winds, then Charley had to have been a Cat. 2 in Orlando! The damage we got there was definitly more than their Cat. 1 description:Frank P wrote:Gee for some reason this week I just want to disagree ... maybe it's from Katrina stress... but a Cat 2 will NOT destroy eveything in its path...
My house has been hit with at least Cat 2 winds directly on two occasions... Camille, which caused minor flood damage and a loss of shinges... the original house at the time had NO HURRICANE STRAPS and still was not damaged from Camille's winds.... which had to be at least Cat 2 in Biloxi... Probably much more..
Elena in 85 had at least Cat 2 winds and I had NO DAMAGE except a hand full of shingles blown off the front of the house.. not enough to claim insurance on...
I probably even came close to Cat 2 winds from Katrina... I think we had at least Cat 2 winds but others think they were less... I know that my second floor, found one block inland, still had all the vinyl siding on it, 75 % of the shingles, and it still had two wind turbines on the roof, both working... so the winds didn't do much damage to my second floor... first floor was destroyed by the surge, second floor floated up the street.
Now remember that I LIVE DIRECTLY ON THE BEACH IN BILOXI... I have nothing between me and the direct forces of the wind... so I've experienced first hand on the beach what Cat 2 winds can do.. and they hardly ever destroy everthing in its path... in fact you build your house to the applicable codes and you should expect your house to fare pretty well...
Here is what the NHC says about a Cat 2 Hurricane per the Saffir-Simpson scale...
"Some roofing material, door, and window damage of buildings. Considerable damage to shrubbery and trees with some trees blown down. Considerable damage to mobile homes, poorly constructed signs, and piers. "
This is no where close to leveling everything in its path... at least in the opinion of the SS scale
"Here is what the NHC says about a Cat 3"
"Some structural damage to small residences and utility buildings with a minor amount of curtainwall failures. Damage to shrubbery and trees with foliage blown off trees and large trees blown down. Mobile homes and poorly constructed signs are destroyed."
That doesn't sound like complete devastation
"Here is what the NHC says about a Cat 4"
"More extensive curtainwall failures with some complete roof structure failures on small residences. Shrubs, trees, and all signs are blown down. Complete destruction of mobile homes. Extensive damage to doors and windows. "
Again this is not leveling everything in its path, even for a Cat 4, so a well built home up to Hurricane standard should survive, provided of course they don't get surge damage... that's another story
now the poop on a Cat 5 per the SS scale
"Complete roof failure on many residences and industrial buildings. Some complete building failures with small utility buildings blown over or away. All shrubs, trees, and signs blown down. Complete destruction of mobile homes. Severe and extensive window and door damage."
Ok, that sounds like leveling anything in its path... no argument from me here
A Cat 2 Hurricane relative to strait line winds will NOT level everything in its path, only poorly construction homes, and trailers... this does not factor in the impact on tornadoes... they are a beast of a different nature... hurricane spawn tornadoes may level everything in its path, but a weak TS can generate tornadoes
Then again maybe the SS scale is all hosed up... it was relative to storm surges as Katrina proved..
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