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Hurricane Katrina Now Category 5

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  • Hurricane Katrina Now Category 5

    If this thing hits New Orleans directly, that city wont be there in a few days. The city already lays about 8 feet below sea level. Cory, if you are still there you better leave bro..



    Hurricane Katrina is an extremely dangerous Category 5 storm on the Saffir-Simpson scale. Maximum sustained winds have now been greatly increased to 160 mph. Katrina continues not only grow stronger, but it continues to grow larger. Hurricane force winds extend 75 miles from the center in all but the southwest quadrant of the system. The center of Katrina was 275 miles from the mouth of the Mississippi River at 4am CDT, but the hurricane force winds are only 200 miles from the coast.

    Everyone along the northern Gulf of Mexico needs to take this hurricane very seriously and put action plans into play now. Hurricane warnings have now been hoisted from Morgan City, La., to the Florida-Alabama border. This includes the city of New Orleans and Lake Pontchartrain. A tropical storm warning and a hurricane watch have been issued from the Alabama-Florida border eastward to Destin, Florida and from west of Morgan City to Intracoastal City, Louisiana.

    Katrina is forecast to turn to the northwest later this morning, then toward the north tonight. Well ahead of the center there will be very high surf crashing ashore in the northern Gulf starting Sunday night. You'll need to use extreme caution or just not go in the water at all along all of the northern Gulf beaches from Louisiana to western Florida due to this increased surf. Extreme damaging winds, high, life threatening storm surge, and deadly flooding rains with possible tornadoes are expected at landfall.

    Effects from Katrina will not be confined to coastal areas. Once Hurricane Katrina makes landfall, it will progress inland Monday into Tuesday with a trail of flooding rains and damaging winds across Mississippi and Alabama and then into Tennessee. Torrential, flooding rainfall is possible with the remnants of Katrina well inland, possibly into the Ohio Valley, Great Lakes and the Northeast later this week.


    Elsewhere, there are two areas of low pressure in the central Atlantic. One low pressure is a system that has been monitored for several days now. It is centered about 800 miles east-northeast of the Leeward Islands. The strong area of low pressure has dealt with a harsh environment ever since its existence. Atmospheric conditions have not improved over the last 12 hours, so development with this system would be slow.

    A second area of low pressure is located several hundred miles southeast of the aforementioned low. This system continues to show signs of organization and could become the next tropical depression later today. It could approach the Lesser Antilles in the next 3 to 4 days.

    Irwin has weakened to a tropical depression in the eastern Pacific Ocean. Top winds are down to 30 mph. Tropical Depression Irwin should continue to move westward and weaken today.

    In the northwest Pacific Talim has become a typhoon and is forecast to grow to a 120 mph typhoon before moving across Taiwan and into mainland China in the next 3 to 4 days.
    Last edited by Bouncer; 08-28-05, 09:01 AM.

  • #2
    This thing now has winds of 175mph...

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    • #3
      fuck, its a monster

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      • #4
        that thing is fucking huge, sounds like one hell of storm, with the possible tornadoes and shit that can follow, man I would be packing my ass up ASAP on this one

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        • #5
          I have 3 sisters and a brother that live in and around the new orleans area.....They have all evacuated.

          This is the hurricane that they've always talked about that would flood new orleans and put it under water. The city is below sea level and is surronded by water on just about all sides......When the surge comes in the city is going to start taking on water as if it was a bowl.

          The 175 m.p.h. sustained winds are equal to that of a F-3 Tornado. I hope everyone got out of there. Those that stay are going to be in real trouble. There's not going to be any riding this one out.

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          • #6
            Geez...in the end this may be worse then hurricane Camille. Not good.

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            • #7
              Man, that's not good. Not good at all.

              LD

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              • #8
                they do have that pump and levee system hopefully it continues to work after the flood comes to clean the city faster. Good luck to all those down south.

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                • #9
                  Originally posted by stonecold54
                  they do have that pump and levee system hopefully it continues to work after the flood comes to clean the city faster. Good luck to all those down south.
                  You can't run the pumps with no electricity. Also the levee system will hold the water in if the water goes over them.

                  http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/nova/sciencenow/3204/02.html

                  watch the 12 min clip. amazing.

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                  • #10
                    They are using the Superdome for a huge shelter. I hope that that thing can sustain Catagory 5 winds.

                    If the roof comes off that thing.......

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                    • #11
                      Originally posted by Ron Mexico
                      watch the 12 min clip. amazing.

                      Great post.... :bravonew:

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                      • #12
                        Originally posted by TheStromba
                        They are using the Superdome for a huge shelter. I hope that that thing can sustain Catagory 5 winds.

                        If the roof comes off that thing.......

                        Well that will certainly be the largest crowd packed in that place this year :)

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                        • #13
                          What a shame. I always worry when it looks like a hurricane is coming this way but at least we're at sea level and above around here, New Orleans... :(

                          I hope most people have left and that the ones who remain behind can be safe in structures such as the dome.

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                          • #14
                            The Superdome can withstand 200 m.p.h. winds.

                            As for those who are trying to ride this out in their homes......

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                            • #15
                              yea its a monster is right!

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