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List by Cat Level - Wiki 1 2 3 4 5 Atlantic_hurricane_season List_of_Atlantic_hurricanes
Pacific_hurricane_season List_of_Pacific_hurricanes List_of_Eastern_Pacific_tropical_storms 1 2 3 4 5 List_of_Category_1_South_Pacific_tropical_cyclones Category_1_Australian_region_tropical_cyclones
root ix StormWeek 2020
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WX Radar Space EQvol Hurr LA O HX B
SO SWN McC KMCB 2kts USA DGX LIX MOB Hurricane noaa 5d LSUEarthScan Wxungrd Hurricane By monthcyc x mo
LA Hurricanes HX
HurriFrame fr * HurricaneLinks HurrByMonth
HurriAllie My.Hurr Landfall 1950-2007
NHC nhc.noaa.gov
Atlantic Pacific twitter coast.noaa.hurr
Text marine text satellite



USA LA.Hx ufo SelectRadar McTxt Area 2kts
Wind Windy earth.nullschool.net Intellicast
Tropical LSU EarthScan wunderground HurrHXBy10day
Intellicast NOAAfaq TrkChart
Time: Time Links

Intellicast
Precipitation: Daily Weekly Estimated
Departure: 10d 30d 90d
Forecast: PrecipCast RainCast. POPCast
wunderground u-s-hourly-precipitation-data
Cold Frosty FAQ Artic Current
Hurricane nhc-kmz surge HurriHX I II HARVEY

Coastal Radar
Amarillo
DFW
Houston
Galveston
Corpus
Brownsville
Norman
L.Rock
Jackson
Tupelo
Birmingham
Huntsville
Knoxville
Shreveport
Fort Polk
LCH
Slidell
Mobile
Destin
Tallahassee
Jacksonville
Tampa
Miami
Atlanta
SC

Atlantic Views = = FL& ECst
Atlantic Wide View
GeoColor : Img - Loop - Ani
Visible : Img - Loop - Ani
Shortwave-IR : Img - Loop - Ani
IR : Img - Loop - Ani
Water Vapor : Img - Loop - Ani
Gulf of Mexico
GeoColor : Img - Loop - Ani
Visible : Img - Loop - Ani
Shortwave-IR : Img - Loop - Ani
IR : Img - Loop - Ani
Water Vapor : Img - Loop - Ani
Caribbean
GeoColor : Img - Loop - Ani
Visible : Img - Loop - Ani
Shortwave-IR : Img - Loop - Ani
IR : Img - Loop - Ani
Water Vapor : Img - Loop - Ani
US Atlantic Coast
GeoColor : Img - Loop - Ani
Visible : Img - Loop - Ani
Shortwave-IR : Img - Loop - Ani
IR : Img - Loop - Ani
Water Vapor : Img - Loop - Ani
Puerto Rico
GeoColor : Img - Loop - Ani
Visible : Img - Loop - Ani
Shortwave-IR : Img - Loop - Ani
IR : Img - Loop - Ani
Water Vapor : Img - Loop - Ani
Saffir–Simpson scale - Wind speeds

Category m/sknots (kn)mphkm/h
Five= 70 m/s= 137 kn= 157 mph= 252 km/h
Four58–70 m/s113–136 kn130–156 mph209–251 km/h
Three50–58 m/s96–112 kn111–129 mph178–208 km/h
Two43–49 m/s83–95 kn96–110 mph154–177 km/h
One33–42 m/s64–82 kn74–95 mph119–153 km/h
Tropical
Storm
18–32 m/s34–63 kn39–73 mph63–118 km/h
Tropical
Depression
= 17 m/s= 33 kn= 38 mph= 62 km/h
 
January 4
January 12 [2]
January 12
January 18
February 3
February 13
February 16
February 25

June 09
June 14 [2]
June 16 [2]
June 17
June 19
June 21
June 21
June 22 [3]
June 24
June 25
June 26
June 27 [4]
June 28 [2]
June 29
June 30 [2]
July 4 [2]
July 5 [3]
July 6 [3]
July 7
July 8
July 9
July 10 [2]
July 11
July 12
July 13
July 14
July 15 [2]
July 18 [2]

 
July 19
July 21
July 23
July 24
July 25 [4]
July 26
July 27 [3]
July 30 [2]
July 31 [2]
August 1 [4]
August 2
August 3 [5]
August 4
August 7 [5]
August 8 [3]
August 10 [2]
August 11 [7]
August 12 [5]
August 13 [2]
August 14 [5]
August 15 [4]
August 16 [4]
August 17 [5]
August 18 [7]
August 19 [6]
August 20 [3]
August 21 [2]
August 22 [2]
August 23 [6] 
August 24 [9]
August 25 [5]
August 26 [9]
August 27 [10]
August 28 [10]
August 29 [6]
August 30 [2]
August 31 [14] 
 
September 1 [5]
September 2 [3]
September 3 [4]
September 4 [5]
September 5 [7]
September 6 [4]
September 7
 
September 8 [11]
September 9 [4]
September 10 [16]
September 11 [11]
September 12 [9]
September 13 [12]
September 14 [10]
September 15 [10]
September 16 [18]
September 17 [6]
September 18 [10]
September 19 [7]
September 20 [5]
September 21 [11]
September 22 [2]
September 23 [5]
September 24 [5]
September 25 [3]
September 26 [3]
September 27 [13]
September 28 [3]
September 29 [12] 
September 30 [2]
October 2 [7]
October 3 [5]
October 4 [6]
October 5 [2]
October 6 [2]
October 7 [3]
October 8 [8]
October 9 [5]

 
October 10 [6]
October 11 [4]
October 12 [3]
October 13 [3]
October 14
October 15 [5]
October 16 [5]
October 17
October 18 [8]
October 19 [3]
October 20 [2]
October 21 [4]
October 23 [7] 
October 24 [2]
October 25
October 28 [2]
October 29
October 31 [2]
November 2 [2]
November 3 [2]
November 4
November 10
November 11
November 12
November 13
November 15
November 17 [2]
November 19
November 21
November 22
November 23
November 24
November 27
December 3
December 8 [2]
December 10
December 16 [2]
December 20







The Saffir-Simpson Hurricane Wind Scale is a rating system that classifies hurricanes based on their sustained wind speed.

The Saffir-Simpson Hurricane Wind Scale rates a hurricane’s strength from one to five. A hurricane’s sustained wind speed determines a hurricane’s category. 
This helps estimate potential property damage along a hurricane’s path.

A hurricane is a tropical cyclone. Tropical cyclones are strong, rotating storms that begin over tropical oceans and bring strong winds and heavy rain. 
When a tropical cyclone in the northeastern Pacific or North Atlantic ocean reaches winds speeds of 119 kilometers (74 miles) per hour, it’s called a hurricane. 
Tropical cyclones in the northwest Pacific Ocean are called typhoons.

Meteorologists use the Saffir Simpson scale to rank tropical cyclones in the northeastern Pacific Ocean and North Atlantic Ocean. 
This includes the Gulf of Mexico and Caribbean Sea. 
Category three, four, and five hurricanes are major hurricanes and cause the most damage in the U.S. Yet category one and two hurricanes can still inflict major destruction.

The scale doesn’t include hurricane-related damage from storm surges, floods, and tornadoes. 
One of the deadliest hurricanes in U.S. history (as well as the costliest) was Katrina, which hit Louisiana in August 2005 at category three strength.  
Katrina took the lives of more than 1,500 people. Many of those deaths were from the hurricane’s destructive storm surge.

Here are the category specifics:

Category One: Wind speeds between 119–153 kilometers per hour (74–95 mph)
Very dangerous winds will produce some damage. Homes will have roof damage, and large branches of trees will fall to the ground.
Power lines and poles may be damaged, causing power outages that could last between a few and several days.

Category Two: Wind speeds between 154–177 kilometers per hour (96–110 mph)
Extremely dangerous winds will cause extensive damage. 
Well-built homes could have major roof damage and many shallowly rooted trees will be uprooted and block roads. 
Power outages could last anywhere between several days to weeks.

Category Three: Wind speeds between 178–208 kilometers per hour (111–129 mph)
High winds will cause devastating damage. 
Well-built homes may have extensive roof damage, and many trees will be uprooted or snapped, blocking roads. 
Utilities such as electricity and water will be unavailable for several days to weeks.


Category Four: Wind speeds between 209–251 kilometers per hour (130–156 mph)
Catastrophic damage will occur. Homes may lose most of their roofs and some exterior walls, and most trees will be uprooted or snapped. 
Fallen power poles and trees will isolate residential areas. Power outages may last weeks to possibly months. 
Most of the area will be uninhabitable for weeks or months.

Category Five: Wind speeds greater than or equal to 252 kilometers per hour (157 mph)
Winds at this speed will cause catastrophic damage. Many homes will be devastated, with total roof failure and collapsed walls. 
Fallen trees and power poles will isolate residential areas. 
Power outages will last for weeks to possibly months. 
Most of the area will be uninhabitable for weeks or months.

The Saffir-Simpson Hurricane Wind Scale

A home in Fort Lauderdale experiences strong winds and flooding from Hurricane Irma. 
South Florida felt some of the force from Hurricane Irma but it was not devastated in the same way as the Caribbean Islands. 

Photograph by FotoKina
hurrican tropical storm with wind speeds of at least 119 kilometers (74 miles) per hour. 
Hurricanes are the same thing as typhoons, but usually located in the Atlantic Ocean region.
 
abnormal rise in sea level accompanying a hurricane or other intense storm. Also called a storm tide.


a violently rotating column of air that forms at the bottom of a cloud and touches the ground.tropical cyclone

low-pressure system that develops over tropical or subtropical waters and has a warm core, a closed wind circulation, and a center or “eye.” 
Tropical depressions, tropical storms, and hurricanes are all tropical cyclones.

tropical storm with wind speeds of at least 74 miles (119 kilometers) per hour. 
Typhoons are the same thing as hurricanes, but usually located in the Pacific or Indian Ocean region.
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