Sydney Hailstorm 1999
I was watching it from Granville and saw it move along the coastal suburbs. I remember telling Rita at the time before it unleashed onto Sydney that the storm was no ordinary storm. I knew it was a severe storm but I did not know enough about supercells at the time.
I note though that the damage insurance payout was $1,720 million putting it into the Gunness Book of World Records for costly hailstorms (Australian Section) after the event. It still ranks as far as I am aware, the worlds second most costly "hailstorm" after the Dallas - Fort Worth event of 1995 (Not sure what date) but damage from that was around $2 Billion. Amazingly Sydney Australia is up there and holds the Australian records for thunderstorms.
While on the subject of hailstorms and supercells, I pose this:- I am looking at what this season could bring in terms of Supercells for Sydney. I am intrigued that the corridor from "The Oaks to Hornsby" which is a well known supercell path has not fired properly for 4 years. The question is:- Is this ready to fire this year and produce a storm that will go all the way? I worked out, the Average return frequency is 2.66 years and looking at that, one would think that this path which has seen some big supercells would be ready to produce. It produced supercells in 1990, 1991, 1994, 2000, 2001 and last one February 16 2002. (The really big ones). I know there was a small one in late March 2003 but the whole storm collapsed around Seven Hills and did not go all the way. I am talking about something like 3 November 2003. Any discussion on this path as I am paying some attention to it? Thank you.
Harley