ronjon wrote:Most of them take the system first into southeastern, southern, or east-central Florida.
From NWS Afternoon Disc:
Tallahassee:
THERE IS CLOSE AGREEMENT AMONG THE SHORT RANGE MODELS WITH CLOSING A LOW OUT OF THE DISTURBED AREA IN THE BAHAMAS AND BRINGING IT W THROUGH THE FL STRAITS REGION INTO THE ERN GULF. THE NAM SOLUTION IS MOST AGGRESSIVE WITH DEEPENING THE LOW AND IT TAKES THE LOW UP THE W COAST OF FL. ALTHOUGH SIGNIFICANT DEEPENING IS NOT OUT OF THE QUESTION...IT WOULD BE UNLIKELY TO HAPPEN WITH A HIGHLY LAND-INFLUENCED TRACK LIKE THIS.
Miami:
THE NAM DEVELOPS A TROPICAL CYCLONE WHICH MOVES ACROSS KEY LARGO AROUND MIDNIGHT TUESDAY NIGHT AND EVERGLADES NATIONAL PARK TO NAPLES BY MID AFTERNOON WEDNESDAY
AND INTO THE SOUTHEAST GULF OF MEXICO BY THURSDAY MORNING. THE GFS KEEPS THE SYSTEM MORE DISSOCIATED AND MORE LIKE AN OPEN WAVE...NEAR ANDROS ISLAND BY TUESDAY MORNING...KEY LARGO BY MIDNIGHT TUESDAY NIGHT...AND WEST OF NAPLES BY WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON.
ONCE THE TROPICAL DISTURBANCE GETS AT LEAST PARTIALLY INTO THE SOUTHEAST GULF OF MEXICO BOTH MODELS SEEM TO AGREE THAT SOUTH FLORIDA WOULD BE IN A VERY MOIST AND UNSTABLE SOUTHERLY FLOW WEDNESDAY NIGHT THROUGH SATURDAY WITH A SERIES OF UPPER LEVEL DISTURBANCES WITH POTENTIAL TROPICAL CONNECTION MOVING ACROSS THE REGION. THIS WOULD PROVIDE PLENTY OF VERTICAL MOTION FOR THUNDERSTORMS AND POTENTIALLY VERY HEAVY RAINS AND TRAIN ECHO EFFECTS. HEAVIEST RAINS MAY ACTUALLY BE THURSDAY INTO SATURDAY SHOULD ALL OF THIS WORK OUT AS THE GFS IS SHOWING.
Jax:
THUS WILL CONTINUE TO HAVE PERIODS OF SHOWERS THROUGH THURSDAY. AS THE TRPCL WAVE PASSES OVER FLORIDA TUE/WED POPS WILL INCREASE TO LIKELY (60-70%) ALONG THE COAST FIRST THEN LIKELY POPS SPREAD OVER MOST OF AREA EXCEPT NW PORTION.
BY THURSDAY A LOW IS EXPECTED TO FORM OF THE WAVE IN THE GULF OF MEXICO.I dunno - seems like alot of agreement with the tropical disturbance entering the GOM and becoming a closed low.[/quote]
Why would ANY NWS office even look at the NAM for a tropical system? It's about the most worthless of models. I'd also point out that the mid-level circulation center is way back near 71W, not at 75W. Any LLC would likely form farther east in the convection than at 75W in front of the convection. This thing would really have to fly to reach Key Largo by tomorrow evening (over 500 nautical miles). Satellite indicates that it isn't moving so quickly.
I suspect that there may be two main focci for development, one east of the Carolinas and one in the eastern Gulf. Both systems probalby hybrid lows along the cold front. Very complex situation. Could be rainy for Florida and up the east U.S. Coast.