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Hurricane Isabel Now Expected To Hit The United States
National Hurricane Center ^
| 9/14/03
| NHC
Posted on 09/14/2003 8:52:00 AM PDT by I_love_weather
click here to read article
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To: Howlin
Honestly, on that site I just linked, the graphic changed within an hour; I finally decided to start saving them to see the difference! Those maps change every time the model forecasts have a scheduled programming run. The NWS guys study them to see which model has been the most accurate in tracking the storm so far, introduce a little of their own bias, and try to form a compromise projection.
The models themselves get pretty wacky at times, and the trick is deciding which ones to discard, because they only rarely agree.
To: Dog Gone; Howlin
It's very hard to measure this sort of thing, because there are so many variables; namely a couple of high-pressure systems. It's impossible to measure it 100% accurately, especially this far out in time.
102
posted on
09/14/2003 9:53:28 AM PDT
by
wimpycat
(Down with Kooks and Kookery!)
To: Dog Gone
When did they upgrade Andrew to a 5? Wasn't aware of that... Andrew though was pretty small in size, but pretty intense. Camille and the 1935 one were monsters. Both packing winds sustained at ~200 MPH.... nasty. I live up around Cleveland, so we will likely get some rain. When Fran hit, that thing got up to Lake Erie and parked itself there for several days. It was weird... the rain actually smelled like sea water... hard to explain.
103
posted on
09/14/2003 9:54:05 AM PDT
by
Tuxedo
(In Stereo Where Available)
To: MizSterious
Thanks for that comment MIZ.
104
posted on
09/14/2003 9:54:16 AM PDT
by
Neets
To: viligantcitizen
You pounded Sam like you were a Canadian and he was a baby seal. Admit it!
To: Tuxedo
just before it crossed onto the land in Florida and destroyed the national weather service station I believe.
To: Tuxedo
When did they upgrade Andrew to a 5? Believe it or not, it was just last year.
To: GOPcapitalist
That is a cold front coming from the west; it will be a battle between that cold front and the warm high over the northeast.
If the cold front winds, Isabel may go further out to sea.
If the warm front wins and drops down, Isabel will be sucked into the coast somewhere between Georgia and who knows where, most likely NC.
Right now, the warm front is stronger than the cold front.
108
posted on
09/14/2003 9:58:25 AM PDT
by
Howlin
To: oceanview
To: weatherFrEaK
but the models are generally tending towards a middle East Coast threat, for now anyways. Yep, it's "tightening up."
110
posted on
09/14/2003 10:00:06 AM PDT
by
Howlin
To: Tuxedo
There have only been two Cat 5 storms to hit the USA, the Labor Day Storm of 1935 (FL Keys) and Camille I believe Andrew was category 5 when it hit Florida. It is also practically a sure bet that the "great storm" of 1900 in Galveston was a category 5, but they didn't have the sophisticated scientific instruments to measure back then. Some estimate it was a category 4 but there is no sure way of telling. The storm surge was one of the worst on records and suggests that it was.
To: Dog; Neets
Now, I cannot vouch for that site; pay attention to other people here who know more than I do. I'm just passing on stuff I've learned on hurricane thread after hurricane thread.
112
posted on
09/14/2003 10:01:50 AM PDT
by
Howlin
To: abner
My house is on a big hill, but my office is at the bottom of a big hill. Where are the gnomes?
113
posted on
09/14/2003 10:01:56 AM PDT
by
sarcasm
(Tancredo 2004)
To: Howlin
Thanks for the link Howlin
This baby is huge
114
posted on
09/14/2003 10:03:14 AM PDT
by
Mo1
(http://www.favewavs.com/wavs/cartoons/spdemocrats.wav)
To: sarcasm
Where are the gnomes?Where ever they want to be. Silly question... LOL!
115
posted on
09/14/2003 10:04:11 AM PDT
by
abner
(In search of a witty tag line...)
To: SauronOfMordor
I just did some calculations based on your picture on #45.
Based on the current speed, and that can change drastically, this would hit Hatteras Inlet - Outer Banks about about 2 PM, Friday the 19th. Not good. High tide is about 3 PM. For general info, low tide on the 19th is 9:30 pm and high tide for the 20th is 3:15 am.
High tides in that area raise the sea lever over two feet. Coupled with a major swell from the storm......this is real dangerous.
But it is way too early to be exact.
To: mewzilla
The ground is saturated for sure in PA,rained damned near every day since early sping.1972 all over.
117
posted on
09/14/2003 10:04:26 AM PDT
by
JOHANNES801
(I am the vrwc.)
To: Diddle E. Squat
What will the economic impact be? Not good.now would for sure be a good time to unload any stock you have in casualty insurance companies.
dep
118
posted on
09/14/2003 10:04:34 AM PDT
by
dep
(Ense Petit Placidam Sub Libertate Qvietem)
To: July 4th
Either it catches land there, or it's heading straight to DC. Has DC ever had a direct hit?
This is a "need to know" question ;-)
To: Mo1
Wow. She looks like a Life Saver in that shot, look at the size of the eye.
}:-)4
120
posted on
09/14/2003 10:06:14 AM PDT
by
Moose4
(I'm Southern. We've been refighting the Civil War for 138 years, you think we'll forget 9/11?)
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