We have to ask the question. When the Atlantic Ocean gets as HOT as the Pacific Ocean is now, are we going to be getting these off the scale CAT 5's instead of the smaller ones like Hurricane IKE in 2008...? I think it would be wise to prepare for that event. If the Pacific is already that hot, eventually it will spread to the Atlantic.
i quote from the above linked article:
"At its peak Monday afternoon (mainland U.S. time), Soudelor was estimated by the U.S. military's Joint Typhoon Warning Center (JTWC) to pack maximum one-minute sustained winds of 180 mph and gusts to 220 mph.
Eye of the Devil: LOOK at that beast at 180 miles per hour!
The Japan Meteorological Agency estimated Soudelor's central pressure at 8 a.m. EDT Tuesday was 900 millibars, making Soudelor the strongest tropical cyclone on Earth so far in 2015. That central pressure has come up quite a bit, reflecting Soudelor's weakening, to an estimated 945 millibars.
According to the Digital Typhoon database, Super Typhoon Maysak was the year's previous strongest typhoon, bottoming out at an estimated 910 millibars. South Pacific Cyclone Pam in March reached peak estimated sustained winds of about 165 mph (145 knots) in the South Pacific basin. "
YIKES! At that speed, windborne debris will definitely blow out glass causing structural failure. Armor Glass has been tracking these and the strange thing is that the Pacific is getting repeated CAT 5 storms - time after time. Whatever is going on to heat the air, the hotter air is creating bigger and meaner storms.
This would be a GOOD time to read "Houses of Straw"....how these winds destroy. And how to prepare.
rm
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