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AUGUST 28 - 2:05 PM CDT - SPECIAL STORM UPDATE #3
CATASTROPHIC HURRICANE APPROACHING NEW ORLEANS REGION
ALL TIME RECORD LOW PRESSURE - 902MB
LANDFALL IN THE MORNING -- 7AM ON THE DELTA / 11AM NEW ORLEANS-GULFPORT)
CURRENT POSITION / NOTEWORTHY REPORTS PAST HOUR KATRINA LOCATED 26.4N / 88.7W or 240 miles SSE of Gulfport, MS. - 245 miles SSE of downtown New Orleans 180 SSE of Port Eads at the southern tip of the Mississippi Delta Katrina is heading just Northwest at 12Kts (13 MPH) over the past 6 hours
RECON Reports:
Pressure 902mb (ALL TIME RECORD FOR REGION) MAX FLT LVL wind 160KTS (NE Quadrant) - SUSTAINED SURFACE WINDS 175MPH - GUSTS TO 200MPH. EYEWALL DIAMETER IS 25NM (NO SIGN OF ANY EYE WALL RE-CYCLING)
Hurricane force Winds extend out 105 miles from the center and Storm force winds over 200 miles to the NE of the center
BUOY REPORTS
42001 180NM South of Southwest Pass, LA Winds N 43Kts Gust 52Kts / 20 foot sea swells 42007 - 22NM SSE of Biloxi, MS Winds E 27Kts Gust 31Kts / 12 foot sea swells 42039 (115NM ESE Pensacola) Winds E 27Kts Gust 41Kts / 21 foot sea swells GDIL1 (Grand Isle, LA) Winds NNE 22Kt Gust 28 42040 (64NM South of Dauphin Island) Winds ENE 32Kts Gust 39Kts / 21 foot sea
Katrina continues to intensify -- and the eye remains stable at 25NM across - with no hint of an eyewall re-cycling.
Though the RECON so far only found 160KTS at flight level, the pressure heights continue to fall, along with the surface pressure. The aircraft has only first arrived at the storm in the past hour - there is little doub in my mind they will find 170Kts soon, or 185MPH sustained surface winds, and gusts OVER 200mph.
I will be doing an analysis of the global model wind shear forecasts to see if there is still the possibility for some shears to develope on the north side of the storm later tonight before landfall.
However -- given the immense size and intensity of this all-time record storm -- there may be 'no stopping' this storm -- as Super Storms, like Katrina, tend to create their very own environment -- and can 'deflect' small outside influences - such light wind shear, or areas of dry air. (like we saw over the past 2 days)
I'll have a nother brief update around 5 PM CDT.
To those living in the area being impacted by this storm - my personal prayers are with you.
Steve
http://www.wunderground.com/blog/SteveGregory/show.html
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