P.K. wrote:HurricaneBill wrote:JTWC has the storm at sustained winds of 50 knots.
If the highest gusts are around 220 km/h, that equals around 137 mph.
50 knots = 58 mph
A storm with sustained winds of 58 mph producing 137 mph gusts does not seem right. Especially with a pressure of 965 mb.
According to the Dvorak scale, a Pacific cyclone with a pressure of 965 mb should be about Category 1-2 on the SS scale.
Is JTWC underestimating Harvey or am I missing something here?
I thought gusts were around 40% stronger than sustained winds for these sort of systems? Those do seem very high gusts given the sustained winds given by the JTWC.
Well... here's another thing to remember. The 58 mph from JTWC is a one-minute average. The 137 mph from BoM is a ten-minute average.
Gusts, like you said, are figured 40% than the sustained speed. Therefore BoM is observing 82 mph. However, multiply that by 1.14 to convert from 10-min to 1-min and you'll get 94 mph.
Regardless, there's still a large difference between JTWC's 50 mph and Harvey's 95 mph, but in my opinion it boils down to JTWC underestimated Harvey due to his size.




