Flhurricane.com - Central Florida Hurricane Center - Tracking Storms since 1995
30 Years of Hurricanes Without the Hype - Since 1995
Login
New Visitor
Days since last H. Landfall - US: Any
175 (
Milton
)
, Major:
175 (
Milton
)
Florida - Any:
175 (
Milton
) Major:
175 (
Milton
)
NEWS
Main Page
News Only
Met Blogs
News Archives
Search
CURRENT STORMS
None
HypeScale
: 0
COMMUNICATION
Forum
(
Newest
)
Site Donations/Tips
and thanks
STORM DATA
Maps and Coordinates
Image Recordings
Forecast Models
Recon Info
More Recon
Florida Radar
CONTENT
General Info
Site Links
Data Links
Site usage tips
Text WXData
CFHC Data Feeds
About CFHC
Mobile Website
FOLLOW US
National Hurricane Center
You are not logged in. [
Login
]
Other Forums
·
Search
·
Active Topics
New user
·
Who's Online
·
FAQ
·
Rules
·
Calendar
Off-Topic
>>
Everything and Nothing
Previous
Index
Next
Threaded
Pages: 1
Ed Dunham
Former Meteorologist & CFHC Forum Moderator (Ed Passed Away on May 14, 2017)
Reged:
Posts: 2565
Loc: Melbourne, FL
98LEW
#
94561
- Mon Jul 22 2013 03:04 PM
Edit
Reply
Quote
Quick Reply
A bit of a numerical oddity: at 22/12Z, Invest 98L was in the Atlantic, Invest 98E was in the Eastern Pacific, and Invest 98W was active in the Western Pacific.
ED
Post Extras:
Pages: 1
Previous
Index
Next
Threaded
Extra information
0 registered and 64 anonymous users are browsing this forum.
Moderator:
Print Topic
Forum Permissions
You cannot start new topics
You cannot reply to topics
HTML is disabled
UBBCode is enabled
Rating:
Topic views: 2233
Rate this topic
Choose rating
1 star
2 star
3 star
4 star
5 star
Jump to
** -----
** -----
** -----
** -----
** -----
** -----
** -----
Note:
This is
NOT
an official page. It is run by weather hobbyists and should not be used as a replacement for official sources.
CFHC's main servers are currently located at
Hostdime.com
in Orlando, FL.
Image Server Network thanks to Mike Potts and Amazon Web Services. If you have static file hosting space that allows dns aliasing contact us to help out! Some Maps Provided by:
Great thanks to all who
donated
and everyone who uses the site as well. Site designed for 800x600+ resolution
When in doubt, take the word of the
National Hurricane Center