Aerial Reconnaissance
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Thursday
March 28, 2024
20:13 Z

Aerial Reconnaissance for the Eastern North Pacific & Central North Pacific in 2006

1999 | 2000 | 2001 | 2002 | 2003 | 2004 | 2005 | 2006 | 2007 | 2008 | 2009 | 2010 | 2011 | 2012 | 2013

Other basins in 2006: Atlantic | West Pacific

Click here for East & Central Pacific non-tasked missions in 2006


Select a storm to view reconnaissance data for that system. This archive updates in real time.

Select a year for another year's data:

Return to: Current Recon Page | Main page of this archive


Named Storms

John
August 30 - September 1
Highest Flight Level Wind: 107 knots
Highest Est. Surface Wind: 60 knots
Lowest MSLP: 950 mb
3 Missions

Lane
September 15 - September 16
Highest Flight Level Wind: 110 knots
Highest Est. Surface Wind: 60 knots
Lowest MSLP: 955 mb
2 Missions

Paul
October 23 - October 24
Highest Flight Level Wind: 88 knots
Highest Est. Surface Wind: 80 knots
Lowest MSLP: 978 mb
2 Missions


Depressions

No available data.

Suspect Areas

No available data.


Non-Tasked Missions


Any mission that has not been tasked by the National Hurricane Center will appear in the archive at the link above. Research missions, including ones that are tropical, and winter missions will appear in this section of the archive.



Recon data on our site is raw. The raw observations will contain errors at times. The dates above represent the period over which reconnaissance took place, not the duration of the storm. The first date is the date of the first mission and the last date is the date of the last mission. All other observations noted on this archive page come solely from vortex messages, if available. Since this data is more likely to have been reviewed, we use it rather than using any other products on this summary page. It will still sometimes be erroneous. Additionally, our site will not always decode the most significant observations. If that occurs, they will not be reflected here. The highest flight level wind will usually be from the highest flight level wind remark in the remarks section, though it may come from item F, which is where the maximum inbound flight level wind is reported. The highest estimated surface wind is either from item D, the highest surface wind on the inbound leg, or from the highest surface wind remark if available. The surface wind is estimated either by SFMR or visually. The lowest mean sea level pressure (MSLP) comes from item H. If it was extrapolated, rather than measured by a dropsonde, it will be noted if it was noted as such in the vortex message.

Once a suspect area strengthens into a depression or named storm, or a depression strengthens into a named storm, we manually associate the recon that was done into that storm when it was weaker with the name of the highest level of development it achieved. (depression number or named storm)