Storm Amy maps turn purple and reveal hour-by-hour forecast as 97mph wind hit UK | Weather | News

Storm Amy, began to sweep through the UK, the estimators to 97Mph’ye, widespread rain and serious deterioration warned the air maps deep purple. Between Friday and Saturday, the Met Office issued a large number of amber and yellow warnings covering Scotland, Northern Ireland, Northwest England and Wales.
The storm, which is fueled by the Atlantic systems and is connected to the remains of Humberta and Humberto hurricanes, is expected to bring one of the most powerful autumn air events in recent years. Meteorologists, Skye, Tiree, Barra and Locber in Western Scotland and 80-100MPH harmful Gusts is particularly at risk, he says.
Here is a list of regions that are expected to be hit by Storm Amy in the worst way:
Friday, October 3
18:00 – Western Scotland: Storm Amy, Gusts of 85MPH hit Hebrides and Highlands.
22:00 – Northern Scotland: Look at Gusts close to Stocknoway, Wick and Inverness 90Mph.
Saturday, October 4
06:00 – Northern Ireland and Western Scotland: Belfast, Western Hightlands and Argyll 97Mph’ye beaten by Gusts.
15:00 – Northern England and Southern Scotland: Newcastle, Edinburgh and borders are hit around 80-85mph inner gusts.
Sunday, October 5
08:00 – Wales and Western country: Cardiff, Swansea and Plymouth 75-85mph are facing winds.
23:00 – Midlands and Northern England: Birmingham, Manchester and Leeds are hit by violent Gusts late in the evening.
Monday, October 6
07:00 – South East England: London, Kent and Sussex 65-75mph see the wind.
14:00 – East Anglia: Norfolk and Suffolk coastline endure a final Gusts explosion near 70mph.
“Storm Amy will be an effective autumn storm for many people.”
“The most powerful winds can damage power cuts, buildings and trees and make coastal areas particularly dangerous.”
In addition to high winds, estimators in Western Scotland stimulate 30-50 mm of rain in just a few hours, increasing the risk of floods and even landslides.
The British geology survey said that rainfall totals may be sufficient to destroy the slopes and threaten communities in isolated areas.
The Scottish Environmental Protection Agency (SEPA) also increased concerns about dangerous coastal conditions in Clyde Findh, especially over the wave and Selin houses and infrastructure.
David Morgan, Director of the Slave Mission of Sepa, said, “We urge the public to stay away from the open coastline.” He said.
Transportation networks are prepared for deterioration. Transportation Scotland is warned about difficult driving conditions, potential ferry cancellations and railway delays, while the air travel may be affected. It is recommended that drivers control the routes before departing and avoid unnecessary trips in the warning areas.
While Storm Amy is expected to relieve gradually on Saturday evening, predictions say that more uneasy weather can continue next week and colder, shower conditions replace the storm.
The UK has previously recorded October Gusts on 100Mph, but predictive Amy can be competing with the most powerful autumn storms that broke records.




