Tropical Wave in Eastern Caribbean

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Kingarabian
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Re: Tropical Wave SW of CV Islands

#641 Postby Kingarabian » Mon Jul 10, 2017 1:48 am

Ivanhater wrote:Off topic..but ex td4 trending a bit stronger on the Euro coming into the northern gulf coast..that may need to be watched down the road


Yeah. Seeing a system with TS force winds into the panhandle.
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Re: Tropical Wave SW of CV Islands

#642 Postby Dylan » Mon Jul 10, 2017 1:50 am

Kingarabian wrote:
Dylan wrote:
Kingarabian wrote:
It's not that impressive on satellite in all reality compared to when it first splashed down. So depth of the vort is all subjective by the models.


That happens all of the time. Satellite presentation is a moot point at this time. What we do have is satelite data, and the GFS has the best initialization based on the data. How are we to blame the ECMWF if it's being fed garbage? I'd post the image because it's clear as day, but I'm on my phone.


The high resolution Euro at 6hrs has an identical vort depth as the GFS. So I'm assuming it has the right information.

What we should question is if all the models have the same RH information.


I have a Weatherbell account, and I'm looking at it now. The European does not have a nearly as concentrated 850mb vort as what the satellite derived data from CIMSS is presenting, or what the GFS closely initialized with. To me, that is a red flag.
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Re: Tropical Wave SW of CV Islands

#643 Postby Ivanhater » Mon Jul 10, 2017 2:00 am

Also something to keep in mind..if the Euro had a storm like the gfs...it wouldn't recurve. Most likely into Florida or the Gulf
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Re: Tropical Wave SW of CV Islands

#644 Postby Kingarabian » Mon Jul 10, 2017 2:33 am

Dylan wrote:
Kingarabian wrote:
Dylan wrote:
That happens all of the time. Satellite presentation is a moot point at this time. What we do have is satelite data, and the GFS has the best initialization based on the data. How are we to blame the ECMWF if it's being fed garbage? I'd post the image because it's clear as day, but I'm on my phone.


The high resolution Euro at 6hrs has an identical vort depth as the GFS. So I'm assuming it has the right information.

What we should question is if all the models have the same RH information.


I have a Weatherbell account, and I'm looking at it now. The European does not have a nearly as concentrated 850mb vort as what the satellite derived data from CIMSS is presenting, or what the GFS closely initialized with. To me, that is a red flag.


Initialization aside, every model except for the operational GFS have generally unfavorable conditions across the MDR and in the Caribbean.

This system will have to become a hurricane before it reaches the Caribbean so that it may have a chance in fending off the higher shear waiting for it. And the odds of this becoming a hurricane in the next 72hrs are quite low.
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Re: Tropical Wave SW of CV Islands

#645 Postby Dylan » Mon Jul 10, 2017 2:41 am

Kingarabian wrote:
Dylan wrote:
Kingarabian wrote:
The high resolution Euro at 6hrs has an identical vort depth as the GFS. So I'm assuming it has the right information.

What we should question is if all the models have the same RH information.


I have a Weatherbell account, and I'm looking at it now. The European does not have a nearly as concentrated 850mb vort as what the satellite derived data from CIMSS is presenting, or what the GFS closely initialized with. To me, that is a red flag.


Initialization aside, every model except for the operational GFS have generally unfavorable conditions across the MDR and in the Caribbean.

This system will have to become a hurricane before it reaches the Caribbean so that it may have a chance in fending off the higher shear waiting for it. And the odds of this becoming a hurricane in the next 72hrs are quite low.


I don't disagree with you about that, but that's a different conversation concerning the environmental conditions. Remember though that a strong system the GFS is depicting would be able to have its own strong upper level anti-cyclonic circulation to not only brush off any shear, but use it for ventilation.

About the initialization of the ECM we can agree to disagree. I'm 10 months from getting my Meteorology Degree, and I trust what I see based on the data available to me. And it's clear that the GFS initialied future 95L better than the ECMWF based on the Satellite derived data from CIMSS.
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Re: Tropical Wave SW of CV Islands

#646 Postby Kingarabian » Mon Jul 10, 2017 3:41 am

Dylan wrote:
Kingarabian wrote:
Dylan wrote:
I have a Weatherbell account, and I'm looking at it now. The European does not have a nearly as concentrated 850mb vort as what the satellite derived data from CIMSS is presenting, or what the GFS closely initialized with. To me, that is a red flag.


Initialization aside, every model except for the operational GFS have generally unfavorable conditions across the MDR and in the Caribbean.

This system will have to become a hurricane before it reaches the Caribbean so that it may have a chance in fending off the higher shear waiting for it. And the odds of this becoming a hurricane in the next 72hrs are quite low.


I don't disagree with you about that, but that's a different conversation concerning the environmental conditions. Remember though that a strong system the GFS is depicting would be able to have its own strong upper level anti-cyclonic circulation to not only brush off any shear, but use it for ventilation.

About the initialization of the ECM we can agree to disagree. I'm 10 months from getting my Meteorology Degree, and I trust what I see based on the data available to me. And it's clear that the GFS initialied future 95L better than the ECMWF based on the Satellite derived data from CIMSS.

I respect that and I don't mean to question your thought process.

I'm sure you make a good point. From my experience, the models quite often initialize storms wrong (just take a look at how bad the initialization is with Eugene currently), but they normally get the bigger picture correct.
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Re: Tropical Wave SW of CV Islands

#647 Postby Ivanhater » Mon Jul 10, 2017 5:14 am

Add another gfs run into the development column. ..06z Gfs strengthening storm into islands at 120 hours
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Re: Tropical Wave SW of CV Islands

#648 Postby TheStormExpert » Mon Jul 10, 2017 5:16 am

Weaker into the islands but still strengthening at the same rate as previous runs once over the islands.
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Re: Tropical Wave SW of CV Islands

#649 Postby Ivanhater » Mon Jul 10, 2017 5:29 am

Getting shredded. .trough lifting out faster..have a feeling future runs will have this a Caribbean cruiser
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Re: Tropical Wave SW of CV Islands

#650 Postby TheStormExpert » Mon Jul 10, 2017 5:35 am

Yep GFS is notorious for overdoing troughs. Also wouldn't be surprised if it trends weaker in future runs.
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Re: Tropical Wave SW of CV Islands

#651 Postby Ivanhater » Mon Jul 10, 2017 5:43 am

234 hours..entering the Gulf and strengthening
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Re: Tropical Wave SW of CV Islands

#652 Postby tarheelprogrammer » Mon Jul 10, 2017 5:43 am

It is getting to the point where you cannot trust the GFS 2 to 3 days out. Smh I guess the upgrade truly is needed.
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Re: Tropical Wave SW of CV Islands

#653 Postby Ivanhater » Mon Jul 10, 2017 5:50 am

Hurricane into Texas/Mexico border
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Re: Tropical Wave SW of CV Islands

#654 Postby TheStormExpert » Mon Jul 10, 2017 5:52 am

This run was nearly identical to yesterday's 00z run bringing it over Haiti and the spine of Cuba.
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Re: Tropical Wave SW of CV Islands

#655 Postby Kingarabian » Mon Jul 10, 2017 6:04 am

Less EPS support at 00z.
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Re: Tropical Wave SW of CV Islands

#656 Postby TheStormExpert » Mon Jul 10, 2017 6:12 am

Was there even any EPS support to begin with?
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Re: Tropical Wave SW of CV Islands

#657 Postby cycloneye » Mon Jul 10, 2017 6:15 am

Tropical Weather Outlook
NWS National Hurricane Center Miami FL
800 AM EDT Mon Jul 10 2017

For the North Atlantic...Caribbean Sea and the Gulf of Mexico:

Disorganized showers and thunderstorms located several hundred
miles southwest of the Cabo Verde Islands are associated with a
tropical wave. Some gradual development is possible through the
week while this system moves westward at about 20 mph across the
tropical Atlantic Ocean.
* Formation chance through 48 hours...low...near 0 percent.
* Formation chance through 5 days...low...20 percent.

$$
Forecaster Stewart
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Re: Tropical Wave SW of CV Islands

#658 Postby ROCK » Mon Jul 10, 2017 6:40 am

Wow NHC kept 20% not sure why..Euro does nothing with this as does no other global..except the GFS-op... :lol:
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Re: Tropical Wave SW of CV Islands

#659 Postby Alyono » Mon Jul 10, 2017 6:52 am

One thing to consider: Few observations come from Africa. We do not get the best picture of what will happen until these waves are a fair bit offshore. It is then that the satellite data can be ingested into the models. It's the satellite data that shows if we will have a SAL or not.

Hard to see the SAL until it the SAL is pushing offshore
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Re: Tropical Wave SW of CV Islands

#660 Postby Kingarabian » Mon Jul 10, 2017 7:05 am

TheStormExpert wrote:Was there even any EPS support to begin with?


EPS becomes generous from run to run and gives this system 2 ensembles.
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