Pre-satellite era hurricanes
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HurricaneBill
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Pre-satellite era hurricanes
If you could somehow get a satellite image of a hurricane from before the satellite era, what hurricanes would you want pics of?
The ones I'd want to see:
1900 Galveston Hurricane
1935 Labor Day Hurricane
1938 New England Hurricane
1950 Hurricane King (I heard it was a midget storm)
The ones I'd want to see:
1900 Galveston Hurricane
1935 Labor Day Hurricane
1938 New England Hurricane
1950 Hurricane King (I heard it was a midget storm)
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Stratosphere747
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1935 Labor Day Hurricane
No question about it...I would be very interested to see just exactly how quickly it evolved from a TD to a Cat 5 monster...seeing that unfold in sattelite imagery would be amazing to say the least.
Great question...
MW
No question about it...I would be very interested to see just exactly how quickly it evolved from a TD to a Cat 5 monster...seeing that unfold in sattelite imagery would be amazing to say the least.
Great question...
MW
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Updating on the twitter now: http://www.twitter.com/@watkinstrack
- HURAKAN
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MWatkins wrote:1935 Labor Day Hurricane
No question about it...I would be very interested to see just exactly how quickly it evolved from a TD to a Cat 5 monster...seeing that unfold in sattelite imagery would be amazing to say the least.
Great question...
MW
6.02 X 10^23% in agreement with you!
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HurricaneBill
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HurricaneBill
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SouthernWx
Re: Pre-satellite era hurricanes
HurricaneBill wrote:If you could somehow get a satellite image of a hurricane from before the satellite era, what hurricanes would you want pics of?
The ones I'd want to see:
1900 Galveston Hurricane
1935 Labor Day Hurricane
1938 New England Hurricane
1950 Hurricane King (I heard it was a midget storm)
Definitely the 1935 Labor Day hurricane....my #1 choice.
Other past hurricanes I'd love to see a satellite image of are:
1) Great Miami hurricane (1926)
2) San Felipe/ Palm Beach cat-4 (1928)
3) 1938 New England (Long Island Express)
4) 1944 Mid Atlantic-New England cat-3
5) Hurricane Hazel (1954)
6) Hurricane Janet near peak intensity (1955)
7) hurricane Camille at time of landfall (occurred at night; no IR images were available in 1969).
Hurricane King in 1950 was similar to this past season's Charley; extremely small and intense. After looking over the pressure gradient and winds of Charley, IMO King was likely a cat-4 at landfall. The eye was only 5-6 miles in diameter, and the surrouding eyewall very small. The eye passed directly over the downtown Miami WBO (Weather Bureau) where sustained winds peaked at 122 mph, with a peak gusts of 150 mph clocked...with a minimum central pressure of 28.20"/ 955 mb. Peak gusts probably occurred a few miles east and northeast of the Miami WBO....and with the pressure gradient, may have exceeded 170 mph (sustained winds IMO 130-140 mph) along the beachfronts. In Fort Lauderdale, a gust of 138 mph was clocked BEFORE the anemometer became inoperable (blew away).
PW
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- Andrew92
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Definitely the 1935 Labor Day hurricane, the Long Island Express of 1938, and Hazel of 1954.
I would have also liked to have seen the Galveston Hurricanes of 1900 and 1915, The Florida Hurricanes of 1926 and 1928, and just in general images of the numerous storms of the 1933 season.
-Andrew92
I would have also liked to have seen the Galveston Hurricanes of 1900 and 1915, The Florida Hurricanes of 1926 and 1928, and just in general images of the numerous storms of the 1933 season.
-Andrew92
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- vbhoutex
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I'm using Perry's list with some modifications. Thanks Perry!!
1) hurricane Camille at time of landfall (occurred at night; no IR images were available in 1969). Actually I would love to see Camille from infancy to landfall with all of the current technology available, but alas that will never happen.
2)1935 Labor Day hurricane
3) Great Miami hurricane (1926)
4) San Felipe/ Palm Beach cat-4 (1928)
5) 1938 New England (Long Island Express)
6) 1944 Mid Atlantic-New England cat-3
7) Hurricane Hazel (1954)
8) Hurricane Janet near peak intensity (1955)
9) Hurricane Audrey (1957)
1) hurricane Camille at time of landfall (occurred at night; no IR images were available in 1969). Actually I would love to see Camille from infancy to landfall with all of the current technology available, but alas that will never happen.
2)1935 Labor Day hurricane
3) Great Miami hurricane (1926)
4) San Felipe/ Palm Beach cat-4 (1928)
5) 1938 New England (Long Island Express)
6) 1944 Mid Atlantic-New England cat-3
7) Hurricane Hazel (1954)
8) Hurricane Janet near peak intensity (1955)
9) Hurricane Audrey (1957)
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HurricaneBill
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