This proposal I find most interesting, and has merit.
Surface Pressure a More Skillful Predictor of Normalized Hurricane Damage than Maximum Sustained Wind
	
Continuing the discussion...
The Saffir-Simpson scale is outdated IMHO.  This was already shown after 2005 when pressure and storm surge were removed from the table (Katrina was the catalyst - 920 mb pressure at landfall, but "only" 110 kt winds, yet the surge was the highest ever recorded in the U.S. (18 ft or more was Cat 5, and Katrina's surge was 28 ft)!
This obsession w/ wind is often misplaced.  Of the 3 main risks in a hurricane, wind is the *least* of the risk overall.  And wind becomes moot once well inland as the TC decays, but the freshwater flooding risk often *increases*.
And using category 1-5 misleads the public and officials as to overall risk.  Sandy was only a category 1, but resulted in a record storm surge in NJ and NYC, equivalent to what you;d typically see in a category 3.
Keeping it simple in this case I think does more harm than good now.
We should change the scale to an *impact* scale, as that is what really matters in the end to the public.  The WSSI (Winter Storm Severity Index) does this well.
	
	
WSSI plots get very specific, accounting for things like elevation.
Not all hurricanes are the same for impact.  For instance, does the hurricane hit at low or high tide?  It is moving fast or slow?  How large is the RMW and radii of gale-force winds?  Is there baroclinic interaction or not?  Using just wind for designated categories oversimplifies the situation.
And all this would line up w/ what the NWS has become more over time - Impact-Based Decision Support Services (IDSS).
In the idea that we keep the current category scale...
As for any additional catagories, I think I had mentioned before, would one prepare *any* different from a Cat 5 or 6?  The answer is NO!  Once you get to 160 mph, the damage is complete and the risk extreme, so adding any more is like pouring water into an already full bucket.
I suspect this category notion is pushed to further the climate change agenda ("look, we had to *add* category to hurricanes b/c of climate change!").  Also, it is merely a tool for the media to hype more.   In addition, we as a society are *obsessed* w/ labeling things into nice, neat packages/categories, but that can only be taken so far, and more is not always better.  Wx phenomena typically exists on spectrum, not into solid categories.  It's like the three types of supercells, LP, CL, and HP., but how often do odd hybrids and combination exist?
Having just 1-5 is a psychologically satisfying range.  Ending in brackets of 0 or 5 is a good thing in communications and messaging.  Sounds more official.  There is reason why we see top 10, 25, 50, or 100 for lists everywhere!