Just wanted to see if anyone knows where to find some good information on this infamous storm. I remember reading that this storm had the lowest central pressure ever recorded from a tropical system? Is this accurate, and are there any reports on how high the winds were when the storm was at its strongest?
Thanks in advance,
Ed
Information on Typhoon Tip ( 1979 )
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DoctorHurricane2003
There is some REALLY good information at the JTWC archives.
http://www.npmoc.navy.mil/jtwc/index.html
http://www.npmoc.navy.mil/jtwc/index.html
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HurricaneBill
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Here's a link to a PDF file that contains a spectacular visible satellite image of Tip at peak intensity.
(It's a 96 page file, but fortunately, the photo of Tip is on the first page!)
http://vos.noaa.gov/MWL/aug1998.pdf
(It's a 96 page file, but fortunately, the photo of Tip is on the first page!)
http://vos.noaa.gov/MWL/aug1998.pdf
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- HURAKAN
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SPECTACULAR PIXS:
Subject: E5) Which are the largest and smallest tropical cyclones on record?
Typhoon Tip had gale force winds (17 m/s [34 kt, 39 mph]) which extended out for 1100 km [675 mi]in radius in the Northwest Pacific on 12 October, 1979 (Dunnavan and Diercks 1980). Tropical Cyclone Tracy had gale force winds that only extended 50 km [30 mi] radius when it struck Darwin, Australia, on 24 December,1974 (Bureau of Meteorology 1977).
Typhoon Tip is the most intense and largest tropical cyclone on record. This 1979 storm caused widespread flood damage across most of Japan.
The cyclone formed in the northwestern pacific on October 5, 1979 as tropical depression 23. It strengthened to Tropical Storm Tip on the 6th, and Typhoon Tip on the 9th. After moving into a very favorable environment for development, Typhoon Tip quickly strengthened into Super Typhoon Tip on the 11th, its pressure dropping 98 millibars, from 996 to 898. It was during this time that Tip's circulation reached a record 1,350 miles (2,170 km) wide, with tropical storm force winds extending 675 miles (1,085 km) from the center. (To put it another way, if a similar-sized hurricane hit south Florida directly, tropical storm force winds would be felt as far north as Charlotte, North Carolina and as far south as Merida, Mexico and Kingston, Jamaica) On the 12th, Super Typhoon Tip continued to intensify, with winds at 190 miles per hour and central pressure at 870 millibars, the lowest barometric pressure ever recorded from a tropical cyclone.
After reaching its peak on the 12th, Tip slowly weakened as it headed toward Japan. It made landfall on Honshu on October 19 as a minimal typhoon but nonetheless caused much damage. Tip caused the agricultural and fishing industries of Japan to sustain damage in the millions of dollars. There were 68 deaths from Tip, including many due to floods that breached a fuel retaining wall in Camp Fuji.
Subject: E5) Which are the largest and smallest tropical cyclones on record?
Typhoon Tip had gale force winds (17 m/s [34 kt, 39 mph]) which extended out for 1100 km [675 mi]in radius in the Northwest Pacific on 12 October, 1979 (Dunnavan and Diercks 1980). Tropical Cyclone Tracy had gale force winds that only extended 50 km [30 mi] radius when it struck Darwin, Australia, on 24 December,1974 (Bureau of Meteorology 1977).
Typhoon Tip is the most intense and largest tropical cyclone on record. This 1979 storm caused widespread flood damage across most of Japan.
The cyclone formed in the northwestern pacific on October 5, 1979 as tropical depression 23. It strengthened to Tropical Storm Tip on the 6th, and Typhoon Tip on the 9th. After moving into a very favorable environment for development, Typhoon Tip quickly strengthened into Super Typhoon Tip on the 11th, its pressure dropping 98 millibars, from 996 to 898. It was during this time that Tip's circulation reached a record 1,350 miles (2,170 km) wide, with tropical storm force winds extending 675 miles (1,085 km) from the center. (To put it another way, if a similar-sized hurricane hit south Florida directly, tropical storm force winds would be felt as far north as Charlotte, North Carolina and as far south as Merida, Mexico and Kingston, Jamaica) On the 12th, Super Typhoon Tip continued to intensify, with winds at 190 miles per hour and central pressure at 870 millibars, the lowest barometric pressure ever recorded from a tropical cyclone.
After reaching its peak on the 12th, Tip slowly weakened as it headed toward Japan. It made landfall on Honshu on October 19 as a minimal typhoon but nonetheless caused much damage. Tip caused the agricultural and fishing industries of Japan to sustain damage in the millions of dollars. There were 68 deaths from Tip, including many due to floods that breached a fuel retaining wall in Camp Fuji.
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