southfloridawx2005 wrote:
looks like the system is finally starting to throw some decent precip our way but tommorrow afternoon and beyond is the real action
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Air Force Met wrote:I think the low level trof is starting to split. Take a look at the GHCC loop and you can see some slight low level vorticity over the Keys...with some more east of So. Fl. But...with most of the convection lines up east of Florida...that is where the real convergence lies. The GFS solution is looking better, given the 24 hour forecast was pretty close (from yesterday's 18z run). A big piece of the energy splits off to the NW towards GA/SC/NC and that may or may not develop...then the other piece heads west into the GoM where the turning is right now...and some hybrid development gets going with the upepr low and frontal interaction.
To me...right now...it's looking more like we will have two weaker systems, rather than one consolidated one that can get stronger. One will be hybrid-like and the other will be more tropical in nature. Just my guess right now at how the models are handling this with the current setup.


Tampa Bay Hurricane wrote:
So that vortex near the Keys heads into the GOM and might go hybrid-
Air Force Met what conditions would the FL West Coast get if
a decent hybrid forms in the SE GOM?


Air Force Met wrote:Tampa Bay Hurricane wrote:
So that vortex near the Keys heads into the GOM and might go hybrid-
Air Force Met what conditions would the FL West Coast get if
a decent hybrid forms in the SE GOM?
Same as you would get if it turned into a regular tropical storm...lots of rain and some wind...gusts over TS force (which is already occuring in spots of e. Florida). NO threat other than possible flooding due to rainfall.

CHRISTY wrote:none of the precip is reaching the ground.




CHRISTY wrote: big blow up of convection near what appears to me to be a low level center forming!

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