Watch: US Coast Guard crew smacked by large waves from Hurricane Erin off North Carolina

A rip current risk remains in place for much of the East Coast through the weekend, but wave heights had mostly returned to normal by Saturday.

NAGS HEAD, N.C. – Members of the U.S. Coast Guard got a glimpse at the powerful waves created by Hurricane Erin on Friday while heading out in a lifeboat off the coast of North Carolina.

Though the coastal flooding threat from Erin had mostly subsided on Friday, other impacts from the storm continued through the weekend.

A crew from the U.S. Coast Guard Station Oregon Inlet in Nags Head were operating a lifeboat off the coast when video captured large Erin-fueled waves forming in front of them. 

In the video, the lifeboat makes a right turn just in time for a large wave to crest in front of the boat. 

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With no time to change course to avoid the wave, the boat coasted over the large wave before hitting the ocean with a large thump. 

Just a few seconds after getting through the first wave, another started to crest in the ocean. 

The boat went over this wave, too, this time with a little more ocean spray hitting the crew.

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A third wave, probably the biggest, followed right behind the second wave. 

"Hang on," someone on the boat said to the other crew aboard, as the wave got closer. 

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Within a few seconds, the wave crested right on top of the boat, water hitting it with such force that the entire boat was covered in water. The wave's strength caused the camera angle to shift, now pointed toward the floor. 

The new angle showed a crew member getting back up, presumably after being knocked down by the wave. 

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"The storm has passed but offshore sea state is still extremely dangerous," the Coast Guard said in a Facebook post. 

A rip current risk remains in place for much of the East Coast through the weekend, but wave heights had mostly returned to normal by Saturday.