


Moderator: S2k Moderators
Stormcenter wrote:The area is actually located in the NE GOM but expected to drift westward. It's August and an area that should be watched model support or not. IMO
http://www.ssd.noaa.gov/goes/east/gmex/flash-vis.html
CrazyC83 wrote:I'd say it has a better chance than anything in the MDR. At least conditions in the Gulf aren't inhospitable...
La Breeze wrote:CrazyC83 wrote:I'd say it has a better chance than anything in the MDR. At least conditions in the Gulf aren't inhospitable...
What are the SST's out in the northern GOM at this time? I'm sure that the water has had time to heat up quite nicely too.
Ntxw wrote:Shear is 20-30+ knots along the northern gulf coast. Pockets of weaker shear to the south but net overall is higher and expected to increase in the coming days. The atmosphere is the ultimate dictator if something forms, not so much SST's as they are always warm this time of year for many more weeks.
TheStormExpert wrote:Ntxw wrote:Shear is 20-30+ knots along the northern gulf coast. Pockets of weaker shear to the south but net overall is higher and expected to increase in the coming days. The atmosphere is the ultimate dictator if something forms, not so much SST's as they are always warm this time of year for many more weeks.
What has been causing all this relentless shear in the GoM, and off the U.S. East Coast?
Ntxw wrote:TheStormExpert wrote:Ntxw wrote:Shear is 20-30+ knots along the northern gulf coast. Pockets of weaker shear to the south but net overall is higher and expected to increase in the coming days. The atmosphere is the ultimate dictator if something forms, not so much SST's as they are always warm this time of year for many more weeks.
What has been causing all this relentless shear in the GoM, and off the U.S. East Coast?
I'm not certain, ridge over the southern conus definitely plays a role. Higher pressures doesn't help waves. I'm not all that sure the gulf has even been that inhospitable with a lot of convection over the past couple of weeks. But remember it takes very good conditions to spin up tropical cyclones, so average (10-20knots) of shear etc isn't going to cut it.
TheStormExpert wrote:There have been a few good opportunities for Tropical Development over the past several weeks, but the shear just wouldn't allow development.
Any break in shear for a few days at least could allow for something to possibly form, IF there is even a disturbance present at the time.
Users browsing this forum: MadaTheConquistador, Stratton23, WaveBreaking and 54 guests