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Hurricane Franklin


tiger_deF
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20 minutes ago, LongBeachSurfFreak said:

Looks like a low end cat 5 to me. Hopefully recon gets there in time before a EWR happens. That’s about text book right there, nice stadium effect. 

I haven't been following Franklin much but that is a beautiful presentation. So glad no one is at risk from it.

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Franklin is without a secondary wind maxima for now, and it may not have yet peaked. Category 5 is a possibility later on during another pass, depending on how long this recon flight will be out there. Incredible storm for this region of the Atlantic. Of course, given record SSTs east of the CONUS, this isn't all that surprising to see Franklin crank given the favorable upper environment. Additionally, it had a very hard life up until a few days ago....lol.
8ffb40a0bf6922153d96d8cc2fe81de4.jpg

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14 minutes ago, Windspeed said:

Ol' Phil busted out the historical perspective. At 29°N, this is the lowest central pressure measured in a TC since records have been kept consistently (1979).
 


There's the end result of the high-latitude SST anomalies we've been talking about all year coming to fruition. 

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Wow! It's 927mb as shown with the tropical tidbits graphic w/satellite. That is a low pressure. The tail end of the recon pass says 130kt approximately at flight level (Previously posted by Windspeed: early part of the recon pass) and maybe 113kt at surface. At some points in history, we have seen storms with category-5 status with pressure close to 920mb and below. Thanks BostonBulldog for posting incredible graphic that says 140kt briefly.

 

recon_AF300-1608A-FRANKLIN_timeseries.png

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Full wash overs at Jones beach. Surf isn’t incredibly large (6-8’) but the long periods and southerly direction are causing the water to come completely over the berm and flood the entire beach with several feet of water all the way to the boardwalk. This evenings high tide should come the highest. 

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