Thunderstorm report 7 March 2008
Hello
Blacktown was hit again and while I was tracking the storm at home, I lost internet connection, electricity supply and mobile telephone coverage. The storm caused some havoc where I live.
At 5 pm Friday, I pulled up the Sydney and Canberra radars and noted a narrow squall line in the Braidwood region moving rapidly NE and two free standing thunderstorm cells moving in the same direction just ahead of it.
The storms were severe warned for large hail, damaging winds and very heavy rain. It appeared that the northern edge of the storms would clear the coast near Kiama so I did not worry a great deal.
At around 7.30 - 8 pm, it started raining lightly. Not long after 8.30 pm the rain slowly intensified and I began to see within cloud lightning flashes to the south. Watching it on the BOM site, a cell SW of where I live and moving NE intensified and on radar, it went into the yellow then dark orange colour range.
Blacktown and Seven Hills was then hit by a downpour and constant lightning (Mainly within cloud). Then gales. I observed no less than 2 distant electricity transformers explode with the typical green flashes.
I then lost my mobile telephone coverage. Shortly after, it appears that either trees were brought down across powerlines or an electricity sub station close to where I live was damaged because parts of Blacktown including where I live lost electricity supply. I then lost my internet connection and I could no longer see what was going on. It was close to midnight before electricity and other services were restored.
Following the thunderstorm, emergency services, fire trucks and SES vehicles were in attendance to local damage and damaged electricity infrastructure.
Looking at rainfall totals this morning (10/3/2008), it appears that Blacktown was hardest hit in western Sydney. Rainfalls of 51 mm at Blacktown Dog Pound, 44 mm where I live, 46 mm at Prospect (By far the highest anywhere in western Sydney) occurred.
It appears the storm weakened slightly over Castle Hill and intensified again in the Hornsby region with 51 mm falling at Hornsby, and 48 mm falling in nearby areas.
I thought the storm and its intensity was most unusual considering it hit some 13 or 14 hours after a southerly change had passed. Just before I lost electricity supply, I noted that there was no severe thunderstorm warning on it despite the chaos that it was causing in the Blacktown locality.
Harley Pearman