Camille's imagery TODAY...
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michaelwmoss
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~Floydbuster wrote:Actually, Camille was a small hurricane.
I don't call sustained Hurricane force winds with gusts to 100mph 120 miles from the center small!!! If I remember correctly Panama City, FL even had hurricane force gusts. I lived in Gulf Breeze, when Camille came ashore and it was one of the most frightening and exciting nights of my life. Gulf Breeze is 120 miles west of the landfall point(at least). I know there have been much bigger storms by size, but not to many storms put down that kind of winds that far out.
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michaelwmoss
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You can see the cuts aren't smooth and flowing like a natural IR would be. Interesting anyway. Whoever said the core tops would be black and offscale is probably correct.
Down here the Gulf saturates in high-angle tropic of Cancer sun for June and July. By August the heat content and humidity start peaking in still hot sun. Boom. Like Charley, if you combine just the right atmospherics and overhead High the GOM SST's can be perfectly transmitted to a cyclonic engine. Camille rode perfect conditions into the Gulf and kept them up to shore. Her IR would be very impressive and equally terrifying for someone looking on from a computer today. If we are in another peak period it would be safe to assume that the phase that 1969 represented should be repeated again...
Down here the Gulf saturates in high-angle tropic of Cancer sun for June and July. By August the heat content and humidity start peaking in still hot sun. Boom. Like Charley, if you combine just the right atmospherics and overhead High the GOM SST's can be perfectly transmitted to a cyclonic engine. Camille rode perfect conditions into the Gulf and kept them up to shore. Her IR would be very impressive and equally terrifying for someone looking on from a computer today. If we are in another peak period it would be safe to assume that the phase that 1969 represented should be repeated again...
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michaelwmoss
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This appears to be taken from the visible on 8/16/69, 1710Z. According to the Unisys archives, at 18Z, it was at 24.2N, 86.5W, which would be about 300 or so miles due west of Key West. It was a strong Cat 4 at this point, 150 mph, 908 mb. So this storm still had quite a way to go. Certainly hadn't maxed out yet.
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This appears to be taken from the visible on 8/16/69, 1710Z. According to the Unisys archives, at 18Z, it was at 24.2N, 86.5W, which would be about 300 or so miles due west of Key West. It was a strong Cat 4 at this point, 150 mph, 908 mb. So this storm still had quite a way to go. Certainly hadn't maxed out yet.
Not pressure wise, only 3 more millibars to go.
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Normandy wrote:This appears to be taken from the visible on 8/16/69, 1710Z. According to the Unisys archives, at 18Z, it was at 24.2N, 86.5W, which would be about 300 or so miles due west of Key West. It was a strong Cat 4 at this point, 150 mph, 908 mb. So this storm still had quite a way to go. Certainly hadn't maxed out yet.
Not pressure wise, only 3 more millibars to go.
Hmm... true. A pressure of 908 should support a Cat 5. Gotta wonder if either the wind or pressure might be underestimated in the best track database.
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The pressure is correct, it was measured at landfall. The winds would be the only thing overestimated. I personally think 190 is a tad too high (Unless there are wind measurements of it, which I highly doubt).
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Unless, Camille went through an ERC of some sorts when it made landfall. If that was the case the pressure could have been sub 900 while in the Gulf. I lean towards this idea.
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Unless, Camille went through an ERC of some sorts when it made landfall. If that was the case the pressure could have been sub 900 while in the Gulf. I lean towards this idea.
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