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|
Locate Us |
2 Portland
Fish Pier
Marine Trade Center
Suite 105
Portland, Maine 04101
Office:
207-772-8121
Fax: 207-772-2367
Jeff C. Liick - Harbor Master
Cell Phone - 207-807-7156
Kevin J. Battle - Deputy Harbor Master
(Seasonal)
James Maxner - Deputy Harbor Master
Cell Phone - 207-
Scott Evans - Deputy Harbor Master
(Seasonal)
Email:
phm@maine.rr.com
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|
Beaufort Wind Scale |
Beaufort Number
or Force |
Wind Speed |
Description |
Effects Land /
Sea |
|
mph |
km/hr |
knots |
|
0 |
<1 |
<1 |
<1 |
Calm |
Still, calm air, smoke will rise vertically.
Water is
mirror-like. |
|
1 |
1-3
mph |
1-5
kph |
1-3
knots |
Light Air |
Rising smoke drifts, wind vane is inactive.
Small ripples
appear on water surface. |
|
2 |
4-7
mph |
6-11
kph |
4-6
knots |
Light Breeze |
Leaves rustle, can feel wind on your face,
wind vanes begin to move.
Small
wavelets develop, crests are glassy. |
|
3 |
8-12
mph |
12-19
kph |
7-10
knots |
Gentle Breeze |
Leaves and small twigs move, light weight
flags extend.
Large
wavelets, crests start to break, some
whitecaps. |
|
4 |
13-18
mph |
20-28
kph |
11-16
knots |
Moderate Breeze |
Small branches move, raises dust, leaves and
paper.
Small waves
develop, becoming longer, whitecaps. |
|
5 |
19-24
mph |
29-38
kph |
17-21
knots |
Fresh Breeze |
Small trees sway.
White crested
wavelets (whitecaps) form, some spray. |
|
6 |
25-31
mph |
39-49
kph |
22-27
knots |
Strong Breeze |
Large tree branches move, telephone wires
begin to "whistle", umbrellas are difficult
to keep under control.
Larger waves
form, whitecaps prevalent, spray. |
|
7 |
32-38
mph |
50-61
kph |
28-33
knots |
Moderate or Near Gale |
Large trees sway, becoming difficult to
walk.
Larger waves
develop, white foam from breaking waves
begins to be blown. |
|
8 |
39-46
mph |
62-74
kph |
34-40
knots |
Gale or Fresh Gale |
Twigs and small branches are broken from
trees, walking is difficult.
Moderately
large waves with blown foam. |
|
9 |
47-54
mph |
75-88
kph |
41-47
knots |
Strong Gale |
Slight damage occurs to buildings, shingles
are blown off of roofs.
High waves (6
meters), rolling seas, dense foam, Blowing
spray reduces visibility. |
|
10 |
55-63
mph |
89-102
kph |
48-55
knots |
Whole Gale or Storm |
Trees are broken or uprooted, building
damage is considerable.
Large waves
(6-9 meters), overhanging crests, sea
becomes white with foam, heavy rolling,
reduced visibility. |
|
11 |
64-72
mph |
103-117
kph |
56-63
knots |
Violent Storm |
Extensive widespread damage.
Large waves
(9-14 meters), white foam, visibility
further reduced. |
|
12 |
73+
mph |
118+
kph |
64+
knots |
Hurricane |
Extreme destruction, devastation.
Large waves
over 14 meters, air filled with foam, sea
white with foam and driving spray, little
visibility. |
|
Saffir-Simpson Hurricane Scale |
|
Category |
Wind
Strength/Pressure |
Effects |
|
1 |
65 to 83 knots
74 to 95 mph
119 to 153 kph
> 980 mb |
Storm surge generally 4-5 ft above normal.
No real damage to building structures.
Damage primarily to unanchored mobile homes,
shrubbery, and trees. Some damage to poorly
constructed signs. Also, some coastal road
flooding and minor pier damage. Hurricanes
Allison of 1995 and Danny of 1997 were
Category One hurricanes at peak intensity. |
|
2 |
84 to 95 knots
96 to 110 mph
154 to 177 kph
980 - 965 mb |
Storm surge generally 6-8 feet above normal.
Some roofing material, door, and window
damage of buildings. Considerable damage to
shrubbery and trees with some trees blown
down. Considerable damage to mobile homes,
poorly constructed signs, and piers. Coastal
and low-lying escape routes flood 2-4 hours
before arrival of the hurricane center.
Small craft in unprotected anchorages break
moorings. Hurricane Bertha of 1996 was a
Category Two hurricane when it hit the North
Carolina coast, while Hurricane Marilyn of
1995 was a Category Two Hurricane when it
passed through the Virgin Islands. |
|
3 |
96 to 113 knots
111 to 130 mph
178 to 209 kph
964 - 945 mb |
Storm surge generally 9-12 ft above normal.
Some structural damage to small residences
and utility buildings with a minor amount of
curtainwall failures. Damage to shrubbery
and trees with foliage blown off trees and
large tress blown down. Mobile homes and
poorly constructed signs are destroyed.
Low-lying escape routes are cut by rising
water 3-5 hours before arrival of the
hurricane center. Flooding near the coast
destroys smaller structures with larger
structures damaged by battering of floating
debris. Terrain continuously lower than 5 ft
above mean sea level may be flooded inland 8
miles (13 km) or more. Evacuation of
low-lying residences with several blocks of
the shoreline may be required. Hurricanes
Roxanne of 1995 and Fran of 1996 were
Category Three hurricanes at landfall on the
Yucatan Peninsula of Mexico and in North
Carolina, respectively. |
|
4 |
114 to 134 knots
131 to 155 mph
210 to 249 kph
944- 920 mb |
Storm surge generally 13-18 ft above normal.
More extensive curtainwall failures with
some complete roof structure failures on
small residences. Shrubs, trees, and all
signs are blown down. Complete destruction
of mobile homes. Extensive damage to doors
and windows. Low-lying escape routes may be
cut by rising water 3-5 hours before arrival
of the hurricane center. Major damage to
lower floors of structures near the shore.
Terrain lower than 10 ft above sea level may
be flooded requiring massive evacuation of
residential areas as far inland as 6 miles
(10 km). Hurricane Luis of 1995 was a
Category Four hurricane while moving over
the Leeward Islands. Hurricanes Felix and
Opal of 1995 also reached Category Four
status at peak intensity. |
|
5 |
135+ knots
155+ mph
249+ kph
< 920 mb |
Storm surge generally greater than 18 ft
above normal. Complete roof failure on many
residences and industrial buildings. Some
complete building failures with small
utility buildings blown over or away. All
shrubs, trees, and signs blown down.
Complete destruction of mobile homes. Severe
and extensive window and door damage.
Low-lying escape routes are cut by rising
water 3-5 hours before arrival of the
hurricane center. Major damage to lower
floors of all structures located less than
15 ft above sea level and within 500 yards
of the shoreline. Massive evacuation of
residential areas on low ground within 5-10
miles (8-16 km) of the shoreline may be
required. There were no Category Five
hurricanes in 1995, 1996, or 1997. Hurricane
Gilbert of 1988 was a Category Five
hurricane at peak intensity and is the
strongest Atlantic tropical cyclone of
record. |
The effects described in the
Saffir-Simpson scale are from the
National Hurricane Center
Fujita Tornado Scale
|
|
F-Scale /
Intensity Phrase |
Wind Strength /
Frequency |
Description of
Damage |
F0
Gale tornado |
40-72 mph
35-62 knots
64-116 kph
29% |
Minimal Damage - Some
damage to chimneys, TV antennas, roof
shingles and windows. Breaks branches off
trees, pushes over shallow-rooted trees,
damages sign boards. |
F1
Moderate tornado |
73-112 mph
63-97 knots
117-180 kph
40% |
Moderate Damage -
Automobiles overturned, carports destroyed,
trees uprooted, peels surface off roofs,
mobile homes pushed off foundations or
overturned, moving autos pushed off the
roads. |
F2
Significant tornado |
113-157 mph
98-136 knots
181-253 kph
24% |
Major Damage - Roofs torn
off frame homes, sheds and outbuildings are
demolished, mobile homes overturned or
destroyed, boxcars pushed over; large
trees snapped or uprooted, light object
missiles generated. |
F3
Severe tornado |
158-206 mph
137-179 knots
254-332 kph
6% |
Severe Damage - Exterior
walls and roofs blown off well-built houses,
metal buildings collapsed or are severely
damaged, trains overturned, forests and
farmland flattened, heavy cars lifted off
the ground and thrown. |
F4
Devastating tornado |
207-260 mph
180-226 knots
333-419 kph
2% |
Devastating Damage - Few
walls, if any, standing in well-built
houses, structures with weak foundations
blown off some distance, large steel and
concrete missiles thrown far distances, cars
thrown. |
F5
Incredible tornado |
261-318 mph
227-276 knots
420-512 kph
less than 1% |
Incredible Damage - Homes
leveled with all debris removed, strong
frame houses lifted off foundations and
carried considerable distances to
disintegrate. Schools, motels, and other
larger structures have considerable damage
with exterior walls and roofs gone, steel
re-inforced concrete structures badly
damaged. Automobile sized missiles fly
through the air in excess of 100 meters,
trees debarked. |
F6
Inconceivable tornado |
319-379 mph
277-329 knots
513-610 kph
less than 1% |
These winds are very unlikely. The small
area of damage they might produce would
probably not be recognizable along with the
mess produced by F4 and F5 wind that would
surround the F6 winds. Missiles, such as
cars and refrigerators would do serious
secondary damage that could not be directly
identified as F6 damage. If this level is
ever achieved, evidence for it might only be
found in some manner of ground swirl
pattern, for it may never be identifiable
through engineering studies |
Weather Map Wind Symbols

Convert from one speed to another
1 knot = 1 nautical
mile per hour = 6076 feet per hour = 1.15078 mph
1 mph = 1 mile per hour = 5280 feet per hour = 0.86898
knots per hour
Type a value in
one box and click anywhere on the page to see the
results
Thanks to
MarineWaypoints.com
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