A Category 1 Hurricane has 980 Millibars or greater, however, to be a C1 Hurricane, its Wind Speed has to be 75-95 MPH.
Hurricane Andrew was a category 5 hurricane when it passed over the Bahamas and Florida. That's where Hurricane Andrew was at it's peak intensity. It was downgraded to a category 3 after Florida then struck Louisiana as a category 3.
It is low, but the exact pressure varies, generally the lower the pressure, the stronger the hurricane. Most have pressures less than 995 millibars. On rare occasions the pressure in the very strongest of hurricanes can drop below 900 millibars.
A category 1 hurricane is a hurricane with sustained winds in the range of 74 to 95 mph.
The most powerful hurricane to hit the U.S. in terms of wind speed was Hurricane Camille in 1969. Camille made landfall in Louisiana with sustained winds of at least 190 mph and a pressure of 905 millibars. The exact wind speed will never bee known as the hurricane destroyed all wind gauges in its path. Camille was one of only 3 known hurricanes to make landfall in the U.S. at category 5 intensity. The strongest in terms of pressure was the Labor Day hurricane of 1935, which made landfall in Florida with sustained winds of 185 mph and a pressure of 894 millibars (a lower pressure is considered more intense). It also made landfall as a category 5.
Category 1 wind speeds are 74-95 mph.
Hurricane Andrew was a category 5 hurricane when it passed over the Bahamas and Florida. That's where Hurricane Andrew was at it's peak intensity. It was downgraded to a category 3 after Florida then struck Louisiana as a category 3.
category one! :)
It is low, but the exact pressure varies, generally the lower the pressure, the stronger the hurricane. Most have pressures less than 995 millibars. On rare occasions the pressure in the very strongest of hurricanes can drop below 900 millibars.
A category 1 hurricane is a hurricane with sustained winds in the range of 74 to 95 mph.
The wind speed is 74-95 mph in a category one hurricane.
; Category One Hurricane: Winds 74-95 mph; Category Two Hurricane: Winds 96-110 mph; Category Three Hurricane: Winds 111-130 mph; Category Four Hurricane: Winds 131-155 mph; Category Five Hurricane: Winds greater than 155 mph
The most powerful hurricane to hit the U.S. in terms of wind speed was Hurricane Camille in 1969. Camille made landfall in Louisiana with sustained winds of at least 190 mph and a pressure of 905 millibars. The exact wind speed will never bee known as the hurricane destroyed all wind gauges in its path. Camille was one of only 3 known hurricanes to make landfall in the U.S. at category 5 intensity. The strongest in terms of pressure was the Labor Day hurricane of 1935, which made landfall in Florida with sustained winds of 185 mph and a pressure of 894 millibars (a lower pressure is considered more intense). It also made landfall as a category 5.
74-95mph is level one hurricane .
1,000
Category 1 wind speeds are 74-95 mph.
Not mild at all. Hurricane Andrew was once of the strongest hurricanes ever to make landfall in the United States; one of only three to strike as a category 5 storm. It was the most destructive hurricane in U.S. history prior to Hurricane Katrina.
Not at all. Hurricane Andrew was a category 5 hurricane, making it one of the strongest hurricanes of the past 20 years.