Cat 6 Declared
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Cat 6 is 188-224 mph
To find out what a Category 6 hurricane's wind speed should be, I did an exponential least squares fit on the Saffir Simpson scale and found this formula:
Level = 69.958 * 10^1.1969,
Or if you round off, it is quite close to
Level = 70 * 10^1.2
The idea is that a storm is, say a Category 3 hurricane if its level is between 2.5 and 3.5. I get from this hurricane levels beyond 5, but also four Tropical Storm levels, plus three other classifications of weak systems. From this formula, I get these limits for the categories of storms. I chose an exponential least squares fit, because that seems to fit the data better, and it seems to me that damage is proportional to the logarithm of the wind speed.
Level From To(mph) Description
-inf- -6 0 25 Pile of rain showers
-5 26 30 Weak System
-4 31 36 Moderate System
-3 37 43 Category 1 Tropical Storm
-2 44 52 Category 2 Tropical Storm
-1 53 62 Category 3 Tropical Storm
0 63 75 Category 4 Tropical Storm
1 76 90 Category 1 Hurricane
2 91 108 Category 2 Hurricane
3 109 130 Category 3 Hurricane
4 131 156 Category 4 Hurricane
5 157 187 Category 5 Hurricane
6 188 224 Category 6 Hurricane
7 225 268 Category 7 Hurricane
8 269 321 Category 8 Hurricane
9 322 NoLimit Inconceivable Hurricane
Since no tornado has ever been found with winds exceeding 321 mph, I just simply sum up Category 9, or Category 9+, as "Inconceivable Hurricane"; if you want to, you could use the formula to describe Category 10, 11, and so forth, maybe for measuring wind speeds in Jupiter's Great Spot.
If these storms are in the Eastern North Pacific, substitute "Typhoon" for "Hurricane". If they are elsewhere other than the Atlantic or North Pacific, substitute "Cyclone" for "Hurricane".
So therefore a Category 6 Hurricane has wind speeds from 188-224 mph. Hope we never get one of these hitting a city - might as well put the city in a blender and turn it to "high".
Level = 69.958 * 10^1.1969,
Or if you round off, it is quite close to
Level = 70 * 10^1.2
The idea is that a storm is, say a Category 3 hurricane if its level is between 2.5 and 3.5. I get from this hurricane levels beyond 5, but also four Tropical Storm levels, plus three other classifications of weak systems. From this formula, I get these limits for the categories of storms. I chose an exponential least squares fit, because that seems to fit the data better, and it seems to me that damage is proportional to the logarithm of the wind speed.
Level From To(mph) Description
-inf- -6 0 25 Pile of rain showers
-5 26 30 Weak System
-4 31 36 Moderate System
-3 37 43 Category 1 Tropical Storm
-2 44 52 Category 2 Tropical Storm
-1 53 62 Category 3 Tropical Storm
0 63 75 Category 4 Tropical Storm
1 76 90 Category 1 Hurricane
2 91 108 Category 2 Hurricane
3 109 130 Category 3 Hurricane
4 131 156 Category 4 Hurricane
5 157 187 Category 5 Hurricane
6 188 224 Category 6 Hurricane
7 225 268 Category 7 Hurricane
8 269 321 Category 8 Hurricane
9 322 NoLimit Inconceivable Hurricane
Since no tornado has ever been found with winds exceeding 321 mph, I just simply sum up Category 9, or Category 9+, as "Inconceivable Hurricane"; if you want to, you could use the formula to describe Category 10, 11, and so forth, maybe for measuring wind speeds in Jupiter's Great Spot.
If these storms are in the Eastern North Pacific, substitute "Typhoon" for "Hurricane". If they are elsewhere other than the Atlantic or North Pacific, substitute "Cyclone" for "Hurricane".
So therefore a Category 6 Hurricane has wind speeds from 188-224 mph. Hope we never get one of these hitting a city - might as well put the city in a blender and turn it to "high".
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Corrections in above post
I found a couple of items needing change in my previous post. Level 9 should read 9+ in the table. I meant "Western North Pacific" instead of "Eastern North Pacific".
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- GulfBreezer
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- wxmann_91
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CronkPSU wrote:Scorpion wrote:There would be no point of Cat 6. You can barely have Cat 5 winds affect land.
monica is telling us otherwise
Cat 5's can only make landfall in small land masses that are flat. So yes, it is quite difficult, with only islands and Florida being some of the only places that conceivably receive Cat 5 winds.
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Monica expressed
I heard from a local meteorologist today that Monica was downgraded to a "Tropical Expression". I guess it expressed itself.
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