00z NAM
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The posts in this forum are NOT official forecasts and should not be used as such. They are just the opinion of the poster and may or may not be backed by sound meteorological data. They are NOT endorsed by any professional institution or STORM2K. For official information, please refer to products from the National Hurricane Center and National Weather Service.
The Wisconsin maps (shear, steering layers, etc) are now "zooming" to the Bahamas instead of NW Caribbean. For example:
http://cimss.ssec.wisc.edu/tropic/real- ... dlm1Z.html
http://cimss.ssec.wisc.edu/tropic/real- ... dlm1Z.html
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805 TWD
CARIBBEAN SEA...
THE DEEP UPPER TROUGH THAT COVERS THE E GULF DIGS AS FAR S AS
THE NW CARIBBEAN. BROAD UPPER RIDGING IS LOCATED TO THE E AND
AND W OF THE UPPER TROUGH WITH ONE UPPER LEVEL ANTICYCLONE
CENTERED OVER HONDURAS AND THE OTHER OVER THE N LESSER
ANTILLES. AT THE SFC...A 1008 MB LOW IS LOCATED IN THE SW
CARIBBEAN NEAR 17N84W WITH A TROUGH RUNNING TO THE NE ALONG
20N82W TO ACROSS CENTRAL CUBA. ONLY A SWIRL OF LOW CLOUDS IS
NEAR THE LOW WITH CONVECTION FAR REMOVED FROM THE CENTER. UPPER
DIFFLUENCE AND SFC FORCING IS GENERATING SCATTERED SHOWERS AND
TSTMS BETWEEN 75W-83W. SOME OF THE MOST ORGANIZED CLUSTERS OF
STORMS IS FROM JAMAICA TO SE CUBA FROM 17N-20N BETWEEN 76W-80W
AND ACROSS CENTRAL AMERICA. A TROPICAL WAVE ALONG 78W/79W IS
ENHANCING A FEW SHOWERS IN THE S CARIBBEAN WATERS AND OVER
PANAMA. MODERATE TO STRONG CLUSTERS OF CONVECTION ARE OVER S
AMERICA FROM THE EQUATOR TO 7N BETWEEN 68W-75W. MAINLY DRY AND
FAIR CONDITIONS UNDER MODERATE SUBSIDENCE IS OVER THE E
CARIBBEAN. TRADE WINDS ARE NEAR 15-20 KT E OF 75W WITH LIGHTER
AND MORE VARIABLE WINDS W OF 75W DUE TO THE TROUGH OF LOW PRES.
COMPUTER MODELS SUGGESTS THAT CONSIDERABLE TROPICAL MOISTURE
WILL REMAIN IN THE W CARIBBEAN THRU MUCH OF THE WEEK.
CARIBBEAN SEA...
THE DEEP UPPER TROUGH THAT COVERS THE E GULF DIGS AS FAR S AS
THE NW CARIBBEAN. BROAD UPPER RIDGING IS LOCATED TO THE E AND
AND W OF THE UPPER TROUGH WITH ONE UPPER LEVEL ANTICYCLONE
CENTERED OVER HONDURAS AND THE OTHER OVER THE N LESSER
ANTILLES. AT THE SFC...A 1008 MB LOW IS LOCATED IN THE SW
CARIBBEAN NEAR 17N84W WITH A TROUGH RUNNING TO THE NE ALONG
20N82W TO ACROSS CENTRAL CUBA. ONLY A SWIRL OF LOW CLOUDS IS
NEAR THE LOW WITH CONVECTION FAR REMOVED FROM THE CENTER. UPPER
DIFFLUENCE AND SFC FORCING IS GENERATING SCATTERED SHOWERS AND
TSTMS BETWEEN 75W-83W. SOME OF THE MOST ORGANIZED CLUSTERS OF
STORMS IS FROM JAMAICA TO SE CUBA FROM 17N-20N BETWEEN 76W-80W
AND ACROSS CENTRAL AMERICA. A TROPICAL WAVE ALONG 78W/79W IS
ENHANCING A FEW SHOWERS IN THE S CARIBBEAN WATERS AND OVER
PANAMA. MODERATE TO STRONG CLUSTERS OF CONVECTION ARE OVER S
AMERICA FROM THE EQUATOR TO 7N BETWEEN 68W-75W. MAINLY DRY AND
FAIR CONDITIONS UNDER MODERATE SUBSIDENCE IS OVER THE E
CARIBBEAN. TRADE WINDS ARE NEAR 15-20 KT E OF 75W WITH LIGHTER
AND MORE VARIABLE WINDS W OF 75W DUE TO THE TROUGH OF LOW PRES.
COMPUTER MODELS SUGGESTS THAT CONSIDERABLE TROPICAL MOISTURE
WILL REMAIN IN THE W CARIBBEAN THRU MUCH OF THE WEEK.
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- southerngale
- Retired Staff
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Scorpion wrote:I really don't understand why the NHC says upper level winds are hostile. Shear looks 20 kts at most in the area of the low.
Maybe this response by wxman57 about shear maps in another thread will help a little:
wxman57 wrote:Ivan14 wrote:It certainly has potential to develop. Wind shear is low in the Caribbean and the water is definitely hot enough.
I never trust wind shear maps, as many models don't have a clue what the actual winds are over the troipcs. I do look at water vapor loops to get an idea of the wind fields aloft.
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- Extremeweatherguy
- Category 5
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- Joined: Mon Oct 10, 2005 8:13 pm
- Location: Florida
The latest from Joe Bastardi this evening:
-There are going to be many "model false alarms" in coming days.
-He expects Atlantic acitvity to increase after the 10th (especially in the NW Carrib. and Gulf).
-He thinks the Gulf has the highest threat of a storm before the end of June.
-He expects the ridge to come NE more strongly toward the Ohio valley (opening up the Gulf as a pathway).
-There are going to be many "model false alarms" in coming days.
-He expects Atlantic acitvity to increase after the 10th (especially in the NW Carrib. and Gulf).
-He thinks the Gulf has the highest threat of a storm before the end of June.
-He expects the ridge to come NE more strongly toward the Ohio valley (opening up the Gulf as a pathway).
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- Stratusxpeye
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- Extremeweatherguy
- Category 5
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- Location: Florida
Say the high pressure moves from the Ohio Valley to North Carolina and their was a system in the Caribbean wouldn't the logical path be LA, Miss, AL, and Fl panhandle area.If the high was in that position I can't see the storm moving across Central or Southern Florida. Oh I forgot upper Texas Coast. Opal do you agree.
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I agree,central/western Gulf.I suppose it would take a cold front to sweep it into central/south FL.boca wrote:Say the high pressure moves from the Ohio Valley to North Carolina and their was a system in the Caribbean wouldn't the logical path be LA, Miss, AL, and Fl panhandle area.If the high was in that position I can't see the storm moving across Central or Southern Florida. Oh I forgot upper Texas Coast. Opal do you agree.
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- SouthFloridawx
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- Category 1
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Opal storm wrote:I agree,central/western Gulf.I suppose it would take a cold front to sweep it into central/south FL.boca wrote:Say the high pressure moves from the Ohio Valley to North Carolina and their was a system in the Caribbean wouldn't the logical path be LA, Miss, AL, and Fl panhandle area.If the high was in that position I can't see the storm moving across Central or Southern Florida. Oh I forgot upper Texas Coast. Opal do you agree.
From Accuweather.com.......
Today's Discussion
Low Pressure in the Northwest Caribbean is Being Monitored
Posted: 5-JUN-2006 6:32pm EDT
Tropical trouble might be brewing in the northwest Caribbean
By Expert Senior Meteorologist Dan Kottlowski
We are monitoring a broad area of low pressure over Central America into the northwest Caribbean. The lowest pressures are found southeast of Nicragua and just east of Costa Rica. Upper level winds over the northwest Caribbean are creating too much shear for this system to organize within the next couple of days. Besides an upper level system that extends over the Gulf of Mexico into Central America will have to weaken further and lift out before we can consider any development. Some computer model output is showing possible development Thursday into Friday. But as was the case last year this output cannot be trusted. We saw model output ramp up several "Boguscanes" last year. If the upper level system now in place over the eastern Gulf of Mexico lifts out to the northeast this low pressure area might become organized somewhere just east of Belize or just east of the Yucatan. The model output latching onto this development suggests what ever develops will move northward this weekend.
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- Extremeweatherguy
- Category 5
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- SouthFloridawx
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00Z NAM
http://www.nco.ncep.noaa.gov/pmb/nwprod ... loop.shtml
the experimental one is only at 48 hours right now. I'll post it when it's finished.
http://www.nco.ncep.noaa.gov/pmb/nwprod ... loop.shtml
the experimental one is only at 48 hours right now. I'll post it when it's finished.
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- SouthFloridawx
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