Snippet from the latest NWS Melbourne disco ...
http://forecast.weather.gov/product.php?site=MLB&issuedby=MLB&product=AFD&format=CI&version=1&glossary=1Friday-Sunday...Uncertainty remains rather high in the mid term
with guidance persistently disagreeing on what`s going to happen
with an area of low pressure near the Yucatan Peninsula. The
aforementioned area of low pressure, associated with the remnants
of Hurricane Agatha is expected to interact with an upper level
trough located off the east coast of Florida over the next few
days.
The National Hurricane Center (NHC) continues to monitor this
area with a high chance for tropical development forecast within
48hrs. Many factors appear to be influencing the development of
the tropical system which would explain the higher uncertainty in
guidance. Furthermore, the track of the feature will be largely
dependent on how fast high pressure builds from the northwest, as
it`s expected to drop over the western Gulf of Mexico sometime
this weekend. The GFS remains the fastest and most southern
solution with the high quickly dropping into the GOM, in addition
to, a weaker subtropical ridge.
Additionally, the ECMWF and NAM
are slower and farther north with the ECMWF remaining the most
consistent and what appears to be the most likely scenario. A
stronger system would most likely lead to a farther northwestern
track, which is what the ECMWF has been hinting at for quite some
time with the disturbance tracking from southwestern Florida and
eventually reaching just south of Cape Canaveral before moving
offshore by the beginning of next week.
Regardless of the exact path that the storm system takes, rain
chances will begin to gradually increase on Friday from the south-
southwest and spread northward into the weekend with rainbands
expected to pivot over central Florida and the associated local
Atlantic waters through the weekend. High POPs will exists each
day through the weekend with numerous to widespread showers and
lightning storms. While it is too early to determine the exact
impacts from this system, gusty winds, heavy rainfall, flooding,
and frequent lightning strikes appear increasingly likely across
east- central Florida this weekend with the greatest chance for
heavy rainfall on Saturday. Expect highs generally around the low
to mid 80s across the Treasure Coast and the mid 80s to low 90s
elsewhere. Low temperatures are forecast to reach the low-to-mid
70s.