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Major Hurricane Milton


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An all timer of a VDM.
912mb
158kt FL wind peak
Severe turbulence in the NW & NE eyewall 
11°C temperature difference in eyewall 
Flocks of birds observed in the eye
Godspeed our avian friendsScreenshot_20241007_135025_Chrome.jpg

Sent from my SM-S901U using Tapatalk

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2 minutes ago, Moderately Unstable said:

Well, with 175 mph winds, we're at an EF-4 tornado intensity...for reference, and around to a touch below the speed a commercial jet takes off at. At such speeds, a lot of stuff gets pulled in. What is notable is that for the plane to have seen birds, they would need to be relatively close to the plane. Bird types were not reported, but bird strikes can take out aircraft engines. They are lucky they did not hit the birds. 

I wonder if the birds were seen visually, or picked up on radar on the plane.

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14 minutes ago, Wannabehippie said:

I wonder if the birds were seen visually, or picked up on radar on the plane.

Fair question but typically birds are reported if seen visually in aviation. Commercial ac also have onboard radar these days (to avoid microbursts and hail mainly). To keep on topic - for purposes of this storm, it's likely visual confirmation. Birds would show up as a radar reflectivity return but you couldn't identify them as "flock of birds" via radar alone. They saw them. 

 

Also fun fact for the group, NOAA9 appears to have launched. It is possible we will be watching some new records in the next few hours. Edit: appears that we have to wait until 1845 for TEAL73 to launch for the next LL recon. 

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7 minutes ago, AccuChris said:

Looks like they sped up the next recon mission as its already in the Gulf heading to Milton


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IMG_6350.jpg

Unfortunately that's an upper level dropsonde mission.  Will be good for forecast but not to get updated storm data.

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10 minutes ago, jbenedet said:

Outside of occasional wobbles, it does appear Milton has lost the southerly component to its trajectory.  I think the odds of a clear miss of the Yucatán have gone up a lot since 12z today.

Clearly been N of due of East for sometime.

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GFS seems like its on its own with regards to less weakening before landfall. Most other guidance seems to want to knock Milton down more prior to landfall compared to previous runs. Wont matter too much as far as the surge unfortunately. 

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59 minutes ago, WxWatcher007 said:

There are only a handful of Atlantic systems with this kind of evolution. This is the second fastest hurricane to go from C1 to C5. Only behind Wilma.

41SZzS0.jpeg

Milton is unique in that it was the first rapidly intensify while moving southeastward earlier. 

 

 

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