IdaliaHelene
Member
over for kirkcelsIf Kirk would be ugly or very attractive as a human jfl
over for kirkcelsIf Kirk would be ugly or very attractive as a human jfl
Thoughts on the poor formatting?I agree on the secondary peak intensity of 85 kts on Ernesto. We could see after the landfall in Bermuda Ernesto did briefly weaken back to a tropical storm but it did begin to regain intensity after about 12-18 hours. The storm became well organzied for such a high latitude.
The NHC had Ernesto's secondary peak at 80 kts operationally.
It was shifted for about 10 pagesPoor formatting? The report seems normal to me. Just like any other for the most part.
Knew you would spot that.HAHAHAHA WHAT
View attachment 34888
I spat out my drink reading the reportKnew you would spot that.
With Oscar's formation being pushed back 15 hours, to 00Z October 19th, Oscar now has its formation just 6 hours after Tropical Storm Nadine formed. (Nadine formed according to TCR at 18Z October 18th, and Oscar formed according to the TCR at 00Z October 19th)Hurricane Oscar's TCR is now out! No change in intensity, however the formation time was pushed back from the first advisory time of 15Z October 19th, to 00Z on October 19th.
I must have missed Beryl. Very interested to see what they say about Milton - I almost expect them to downgrade the pressure a bit because of the fact that they missed the center of the eye on their 897 mb-reading pass.Helene remains 120 kts (140 mph at landfall. Pressure was brought down from 947 mbs at landfall to 941 mbs in accordance to a pressure reading of around 942 mbs around landfall. Helene persisted as a hurricane well inland.
With Helene now out we are just waiting on Hurricane Milton from the ATL and Hurricane Hone from the CPAC.
So my thinking is that if Milton was still intensifying (abit not at the 9mb per hour as it was earlier in the day) I would guess the pressure was at least 2 mbs lower that estimated. So I would have gone 895 mbs at that time, and since it appeared to be intensifying for a little while afterwards, I would give the final pressure as 894 mbs (Suppressing Rita for pressure to become the strongest ATL hurricane in the Gulf on record)I must have missed Beryl. Very interested to see what they say about Milton - I almost expect them to downgrade the pressure a bit because of the fact that they missed the center of the eye on their 897 mb-reading pass.
I’ve never seen Rita at peak intensity in any imagery - I’d love to be able to compare Milton to Rita at their respective peaks. Just based on radar presentation Milton just screams sub-895 mb to me, so yours is a great take imo. The extremely small eye and pink spiral banding at peak intensity was nuts. Still wish we got an objective pressure measurement of its eye.So my thinking is that if Milton was still intensifying (abit not at the 9mb per hour as it was earlier in the day) I would guess the pressure was at least 2 mbs lower that estimated. So I would have gone 895 mbs at that time, and since it appeared to be intensifying for a little while afterwards, I would give the final pressure as 894 mbs (Suppressing Rita for pressure to become the strongest ATL hurricane in the Gulf on record)