Hurricane Dolores intensified rapidly on Tuesday night and it has reached Major Hurricane status. At 11:00 a.m. EDT on Wednesday the center of Hurricane Dolores was located at latitude 18.4°N and longitude 110.2°W which put it about 310 miles (500 km) south of Cabo San Lucas, Mexico. The maximum sustained wind speed was 130 m.p.h. (215 km/h) which made Dolores a Category 3 hurricane on the Saffir-Simpson Scale. There were wind gusts to 160 m.p.h. (260 km/h) and the minimum surface pressure was 946 mb.
Dolores is currently over water where the Sea Surface Temperature (SST) is around 29°C. It is generating well developed upper level outflow which is pumping out mass and there is not much vertical wind shear. Dolores could strengthen some more during the next 24 hours, although eyewall replacement cycles could produce fluctuations in intensity. When Dolores moves north of latitude 20°N, it will move over cooler SSTs and it should start to weaken. Given its size and intensity, it could take several days for the circulation around Dolores to spin down.
A ridge in the middle levels is steering Dolores toward the west-northwest. That general steering pattern is expected to continue during the next few days and Dolores poses no current threat to land.