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Hurricane Ian


Scott747
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1 hour ago, CoastalWx said:

This thing is virtually a coastal storm.

I agree.  Big sprawling ocean storm bumping up against strong high pressure aiding in keeping the winds up.  No real change as far as impacts no matter what we call it but nothing tropical about this in my opinion.

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12 minutes ago, MANDA said:

I agree.  Big sprawling ocean storm bumping up against strong high pressure aiding in keeping the winds up.  No real change as far as impacts no matter what we call it but nothing tropical about this in my opinion.

That may be a distinction without a difference.

I always find it funny when people try to compare them to say which one is "worse"

 

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1 hour ago, jbenedet said:

Still Reminds me a lot of the perfect storm. More Extra tropical, then more sub tropical then more tropical. It was in the “grey” in terms of classification the whole time—shades of everything at once.

What’s cool about this, is it’s the closest example of the perfect storm since (in my opinion), except this time we get to see what would have happened if it made a close approach to land and ultimately landfall.

Key difference will be that Ian had less time to churn up the Atlantic, so the wave factor won’t be *as* impressive. 

That sounds really interesting! Do you mind going into more detail about the synoptic setup of both and how they compare?

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9 minutes ago, MANDA said:

I agree.  Big sprawling ocean storm bumping up against strong high pressure aiding in keeping the winds up.  No real change as far as impacts no matter what we call it but nothing tropical about this in my opinion.

There's some cold air in that high pressure too - there were some frost advisories up overnight and earlier this morning for those directly under it too.

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6Z UKMET landfalls at Myrtle Beach at 5PM EDT. UKMET has been nothing short of stellar since the 0Z 9/25 run and better than any other model since then! Let's see if it can earn an exclamation mark for its performance here with a near Myrtle Beach landfall:

8256243A-2AD2-4EB7-AC24-2B7D72AAC581.thumb.png.5fec890cb63e817358ea4e0329629b56.png

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4 minutes ago, marsman said:

I was just about to mention this. Lots of planes in the air doing surveys per FlightRadar24. US Customs is also out over the Gulf, my guess is debris survey or stranded boaters.

Its a myriad of aircraft with remote sensing capabilities for debris management, damage assessment, and getting the waterways reopened.

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Just now, CoastalWx said:

Structurally might look good, but you can't tell what it looks like from the air with a 10' wall of water moving through.

Sure, you can't do much to prevent flooding. But everything is still in tact for personal property salvage and eventual demolition.

 

But for the areas that didn't get storm surge, it will save hundreds of $millions

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16 minutes ago, CoastalWx said:

Structurally might look good, but you can't tell what it looks like from the air with a 10' wall of water moving through.

Exactly, anywhere that had surge flooding has tons of water damage inside and has to be gutted, if not torn down because mold will start up soon. Unless these building codes have mold resistant walls. 

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21 minutes ago, smokeybandit said:

Sure, you can't do much to prevent flooding. But everything is still in tact for personal property salvage and eventual demolition.

 

But for the areas that didn't get storm surge, it will save hundreds of $millions

Everything is in tact for demolition? Well thank the lord. Instead of a smoldering pile of trash, I have a well organized one. Thank goodness for modern building codes.

 

What am I missing here? 

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4 minutes ago, jbenedet said:

Everything is in tact for demolition? Well thank the lord. Instead of a smoldering pile of trash, I have a well organized one. Thank goodness for modern building codes.

 

What am I missing here? 

Unless they’re building sea walls after this, one day the devastation will just happen again on those barrier islands/surge zones. Not sure what building code can keep the building from taking horrible water damage. Saw it firsthand after Sandy, buildings from the outside looked not terrible but inside- totally wrecked and in many cases needed to be demolished. The barrier islands may be easier, in those cases the demolishing was already taken care of. 

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6 minutes ago, jbenedet said:

Everything is in tact for demolition? Well thank the lord. Instead of a smoldering pile of trash, I have a well organized one. Thank goodness for modern building codes.

 

What am I missing here? 

Easier to clean up crap that's in one place than scouring the island for it.  Do you want to clean up a pile of leaves that's in one pile, or rake the yard first?

When you have hundreds of houses that are no longer fit for habitation (and thousands of people all wanting their houses rebuilt), that time, money and effort adds up when you have to rake the leaves first.

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building codes absolutely work.  You can always sink piers deeper and raise the first floor higher if you're trying to keep a building safe from storm surge.  You can always reinforce roofs and walls so they can withstand cat 5 winds.

It just takes more money, but really not THAT much more.  I do firmly believe that any building in a surge prone area should have to be self insured though.

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