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posted by martyb on Wednesday October 05 2016, @07:24PM   Printer-friendly
from the be-prepared dept.

Hurricane Matthew is a Category 4 major hurricane that is expected to hit the east coast of the U.S.:

With the Category 4 hurricane expected to brush up to the US East Coast later this week after its deadly assault on the Caribbean, state officials warned residents and visitors to start preparing for some miserable times. Up to 1 million people could face evacuation in South Carolina. Matthew is an "extremely dangerous" storm, Florida Gov. Rick Scott said, one that made landfall in western Haiti on Tuesday morning. It then headed over eastern Cuba with winds of 140 mph, according to the National Hurricane Center, before losing some of its force. The Bahamas are next. The forecast is that Matthew will ride along the US coast from Florida through the North Carolina Outer Banks from Thursday evening through Saturday. It could make landfall at any point and all areas should be on guard.


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  • (Score: 3, Interesting) by tynin on Wednesday October 05 2016, @07:41PM

    by tynin (2013) on Wednesday October 05 2016, @07:41PM (#410781) Journal

    I'm about done clearing my yard and putting up my steel window shutters. The storm is only 120 mph now, but is expected to strengthen before it starts slamming into south Florida tomorrow afternoon.

    I can't wait to leave Florida. At least when it hits South Carolina on ~Friday, they will be sleeping in 55F weather while power is restored, meanwhile it is 20F hotter here. Bleh.

    Doesn't help that I'm oncall working from home, and Level3 is dropping my packets all over the floor. My VPN connection is unbearably bad... at least by this time tomorrow I won't have to worry about pesky internet, what with the power sure to go out.

    Sheesh, I'm way too whiny right now... almost rum o' clock.

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  • (Score: 2) by bob_super on Wednesday October 05 2016, @08:22PM

    by bob_super (1357) on Wednesday October 05 2016, @08:22PM (#410807)

    I'm still wondering why US houses don't have permanent wood shutters, as can be found in so many European countries?
    Cold? Here's an extra inch of wood between you and the rain and snow. Enjoy heating savings too.
    Hot? Here's an extra inch of wood to keep the sun and heat out.
    Hurricane? Your windows are protected from flying debris, at least until your roof flies off.

    It's centuries old no-tech which has no downsides besides the occasional paint job. Who decided that Americans would just do without?

    • (Score: 2) by tynin on Wednesday October 05 2016, @08:43PM

      by tynin (2013) on Wednesday October 05 2016, @08:43PM (#410815) Journal

      I can't say I know on the wood shutters. Everyone around me seems to do the last minute mad dash to Home Depot to buy a couple hundred dollars worth of plywood to throw up at the last minute. That said, it seems almost all of the houses made in the 50's and 60's all come with metal awnings that can be lowered and secured and seem to work pretty well for cooling and securing windows.

      I'm happy enough with my corrugated steel shutters. They take about 2 hours to put up if I don't have help. That and the 10" solid concrete exterior wall, I feel pretty safe in a hurricane, although once the roof goes I guess it doesn't matter too much about walls and windows.

      You've definitely made me consider getting some wood shutter after this, if only to help get the sun/heat out. The windows are deep enough I could keep them in the recess without blocking my corrugated steel shutters from also being able to go up.

      • (Score: 2) by JoeMerchant on Wednesday October 05 2016, @10:47PM

        by JoeMerchant (3937) on Wednesday October 05 2016, @10:47PM (#410863)

        So, Matthew doesn't seem to be Andrew, but I visited friends in Perrine after Andrew, and saw CBS block walls that were penetrated by the neighbors' clay barrel tiles that blew off their roof. This was the same neighborhood where the hurricane strapping on the roof joists held, but the joists themselves split down the middle allowing the roof to peel away.

        Funny thing was, nobody died from all that. Lots of people spent the night holding a mattress over themselves as their houses were stripped away from them, but nobody died from that.

        People that got caught in the rising water of the storm surge, they died.

        --
        🌻🌻 [google.com]
    • (Score: 2) by VLM on Wednesday October 05 2016, @09:43PM

      by VLM (445) on Wednesday October 05 2016, @09:43PM (#410844)

      I've traveled some and you'll see American houses made of stucco without even any sheathing just the plaster stuff over studs and maybe some insulation and then drywall on the inside maybe a vapor barrier, especially in bubble era construction, so there's no point protecting the windows when the windows are stronger than the walls or the windows are stronger than the roof. Also us northerners see advertisements for "hurricane proof" shatter proof windows where they throw a 2x4 at the window at 120 MPH and shrug our shoulders "what good could that do for us with 250 MPH tornadoes up here". So none of us end up with permanent shutters.

      Meanwhile in Europe they think everything should be made post and beam of 16 inch diameter oak and everything made after 1100 AD counts as "new construction" so it makes sense to put shutters on a castle like that.

      • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Thursday October 06 2016, @04:36PM

        by Anonymous Coward on Thursday October 06 2016, @04:36PM (#411145)

        Standard construction is concrete block. Good construction is solid poured concrete. Wood is uncommon, probably less than 5% near the ocean.

    • (Score: 2) by JoeMerchant on Wednesday October 05 2016, @10:43PM

      by JoeMerchant (3937) on Wednesday October 05 2016, @10:43PM (#410862)

      I'm still wondering why US houses are built of paper, woodchips and spit. Meanwhile in Europe, they're putting up 50cm thick masonry walls...

      --
      🌻🌻 [google.com]
      • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Thursday October 06 2016, @04:38PM

        by Anonymous Coward on Thursday October 06 2016, @04:38PM (#411146)

        California homes are wood because masonry collapses on you in an earthquake. It just crumbles.

        Florida uses concrete block mostly, with some houses being poured solid reinforced concrete. Many are concrete block with a poured rim at the top.

  • (Score: 1) by justinb_76 on Wednesday October 05 2016, @08:46PM

    by justinb_76 (4362) on Wednesday October 05 2016, @08:46PM (#410818)

    Hampton Roads, VA here - latest update looks like it'll avoid our area completely :)

    just out of curiosity, what window shutters did you go with? the one time I got around to making some out of plywood was for Irene, and it ended up being a waste of time - the storm we got a month afterwards did significantly more damage. Would like to have something ready to put up if needed, but would prefer something that doesn't take up a huge space in the garage when not needed and something lighter than plywood.
    stay safe, hope everything works out!

    • (Score: 2) by JoeMerchant on Wednesday October 05 2016, @10:50PM

      by JoeMerchant (3937) on Wednesday October 05 2016, @10:50PM (#410864)

      Metal is easier to deal with, but I went with 3/4" plywood, cut into 2' wide sections... that was fine when I did it (age 25), by the time I sold that house (age 37) those suckers were heavy and hard to maneuver into place.

      --
      🌻🌻 [google.com]
    • (Score: 2) by tynin on Thursday October 06 2016, @01:45AM

      by tynin (2013) on Thursday October 06 2016, @01:45AM (#410913) Journal

      My window shutters came with my house, some 14 years ago, and I've never known what make/model, if you will, that they are. The nice thing about the corrugated steel is even though i'll have 4 to 5 pieces of it per window and sliding glass door, they all stack perfectly with each other and take only the height of the tallest sliding glass door and are perhaps 1 foot wide, the corrugation is around 2" deep, and it is something between 10 and 12 gauge, so it ends up being a thin long stack of metal that takes up vanishingly little space. There are fixed screw mount points in the exterior wall on the top and bottom of each of the windows. You basically slide them in place and tightened them down.

      I tried rebuilding my jenny in time. Had it for 10 years, and haven't turned it on in 4 years... ::self defeating facepalm:: I thought I had it repaired and working, for about 20 seconds I did... and now it won't catch anymore. Le sigh. I should have another chance before noon tomorrow to try to do another parts run.

      It'll be my 5 year old sons first hurricane. He is concerned but excited. It's rather cute.

      Likely last bedtime with AC for a week+... First world problems! Heh.