I have a feeling that Florida only got a taste with Charley. Winds are gusting in Frances into the 180s with sustained still at 145. With the various model plots posted, it seems that the preferred solution is still to take the storm on a northerly track once it makes landfall. Any ideas on how long this thing may be able to sustain hurricane force winds? If it sustains greater than Cat 1 winds all the way through the northern half of Florida, which I would think is completely possible, this will likely go down as the costliest storm in history. I'm hearing 'talk' now of the possibility of it cutting straight through Florida, back into the Gulf with a second landfall somewhere on the Gulf coast.
There's this part of me that would REALLY like to see what happens when an eyewall of this magnitude comes ashore. But a part of me that is pretty scared of this one. Chasers will have to be in some very sturdy, reinforced structures. Comparing to a tornado - Frances will be a lot like a 20 mile wide strong F2, possibly F3 intensity storm. Sustained winds in the 140s is enough to take apart most structures that have not been built to take it - hurricane clips installed on roofs/decks, etc. are going to get their workout on this storm.
Be safe down there -
EDIT - As time goes on, I'm thinking that we should keep our posts more on forecasting concerns (or be sure that our posts at least contain some forecast discussion in addition to the regular conversation - rather than small-talk alone). We should probably start limiting the peripheral discussion to let the mets get serious about pinpointing landfall for the eyewall. Sounds like a lot of chasers are on their way down, and this could really help them out ... just my opinion.