How strong a storm can the gulf support now?
Moderator: S2k Moderators
Forum rules
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.
How strong a storm can the gulf support now?
Aren't the waters still fairly cool in June? So we are talking max strength of a cat 1, but a tropical storm is the most likely? Could this get stronger than cat 1 in the gulf?
0 likes
Re: How strong a storm can the gulf support now?
zlaxier wrote:Aren't the waters still fairly cool in June? So we are talking max strength of a cat 1, but a tropical storm is the most likely? Could this get stronger than cat 1 in the gulf?

0 likes
- Audrey2Katrina
- Category 5
- Posts: 4252
- Age: 76
- Joined: Fri Dec 23, 2005 10:39 pm
- Location: Metaire, La.
I just checked. Lots of heat potential in that loop current. But a 5 in June? I would be shocked.
I would be floored.... and intoxicated!

A2K
0 likes
Flossy 56 Audrey 57 Hilda 64* Betsy 65* Camille 69* Edith 71 Carmen 74 Bob 79 Danny 85 Elena 85 Juan 85 Florence 88 Andrew 92*, Opal 95, Danny 97, Georges 98*, Isidore 02, Lili 02, Ivan 04, Cindy 05*, Dennis 05, Katrina 05*, Gustav 08*, Isaac 12*, Nate 17, Barry 19, Cristobal 20, Marco, 20, Sally, 20, Zeta 20*, Claudette 21 IDA* 21 Francine *24
- Audrey2Katrina
- Category 5
- Posts: 4252
- Age: 76
- Joined: Fri Dec 23, 2005 10:39 pm
- Location: Metaire, La.
Yes, exceptionally rare; and I just don't think the conditions are ripe enough at all for a major... personally, I hope they never will be.
A2K
A2K
0 likes
Flossy 56 Audrey 57 Hilda 64* Betsy 65* Camille 69* Edith 71 Carmen 74 Bob 79 Danny 85 Elena 85 Juan 85 Florence 88 Andrew 92*, Opal 95, Danny 97, Georges 98*, Isidore 02, Lili 02, Ivan 04, Cindy 05*, Dennis 05, Katrina 05*, Gustav 08*, Isaac 12*, Nate 17, Barry 19, Cristobal 20, Marco, 20, Sally, 20, Zeta 20*, Claudette 21 IDA* 21 Francine *24
-
- Professional-Met
- Posts: 34093
- Joined: Tue Mar 07, 2006 11:57 pm
- Location: Deep South, for the first time!
Audrey2Katrina wrote:Yes, exceptionally rare; and I just don't think the conditions are ripe enough at all for a major... personally, I hope they never will be.
A2K
By mid-July, they should be ripe for a major, and by early August, they could very well be ripe for a Category 5.
I'd be shocked if Alberto gets above Category 2. I see a Category 1 with a TS landfall.
0 likes
- Sean in New Orleans
- Category 5
- Posts: 1794
- Joined: Thu Aug 28, 2003 7:26 pm
- Location: New Orleans, LA 30.0N 90.0W
- Contact:
The water temps could support anything. But, it takes more than water. Right now, as dry as the air is over the GOM is, it would gulp up anything tropical and that would be the end of it. There is no moisture in the air over the GOM and that is a requirement for tropical systems to sustain life and grow. If patterns change, I think we could see something significant in the GOM in a matter of weeks, but, the question is this...do we see any pattern changes???
0 likes
- AL Chili Pepper
- Category 3
- Posts: 873
- Joined: Thu Aug 12, 2004 1:15 pm
- Location: Mobile, AL
Looks like the system is starting to wrap up now where wxman57 indicated. I see good outflow to the north and east. The ULL over the Yucatan yesterday is moving off toward the west into the BOC. There still is a fair amount of NE shear on the west side of the system but that may decrease with time as the ULL moves off and the subtropical jet relaxes a bit. The dry air in the GOM is probably limiting convection on the west side. The convection to the north does appear to be starting to wrap back around to the west. Overall appearance looks to be a TD and quite possibly a weak TS depending on what the RECON finds out.
http://www.ssd.noaa.gov/goes/flt/t1/loop-vis.html
http://www.ssd.noaa.gov/goes/flt/t1/loop-vis.html
0 likes
- Audrey2Katrina
- Category 5
- Posts: 4252
- Age: 76
- Joined: Fri Dec 23, 2005 10:39 pm
- Location: Metaire, La.
Outflow is definitely more impressive; but it still needs to wrap around the center better. One wonders what the role of the trough to the NE will be... still most models veer it off to the N, the NE.... I dunno, I seem to think a more westerly movement is possible. You're right, Cajungal, the dry air in the N GOM will be an impedment; but the shear is supposed to drop over time.
A2K
A2K
0 likes
Flossy 56 Audrey 57 Hilda 64* Betsy 65* Camille 69* Edith 71 Carmen 74 Bob 79 Danny 85 Elena 85 Juan 85 Florence 88 Andrew 92*, Opal 95, Danny 97, Georges 98*, Isidore 02, Lili 02, Ivan 04, Cindy 05*, Dennis 05, Katrina 05*, Gustav 08*, Isaac 12*, Nate 17, Barry 19, Cristobal 20, Marco, 20, Sally, 20, Zeta 20*, Claudette 21 IDA* 21 Francine *24
- Audrey2Katrina
- Category 5
- Posts: 4252
- Age: 76
- Joined: Fri Dec 23, 2005 10:39 pm
- Location: Metaire, La.
No doubt there are hot spots... and the GOM is traditionally a rather warm body of water... which is why I much prefer these storms to stay the heck away from it.
A2K
A2K
0 likes
Flossy 56 Audrey 57 Hilda 64* Betsy 65* Camille 69* Edith 71 Carmen 74 Bob 79 Danny 85 Elena 85 Juan 85 Florence 88 Andrew 92*, Opal 95, Danny 97, Georges 98*, Isidore 02, Lili 02, Ivan 04, Cindy 05*, Dennis 05, Katrina 05*, Gustav 08*, Isaac 12*, Nate 17, Barry 19, Cristobal 20, Marco, 20, Sally, 20, Zeta 20*, Claudette 21 IDA* 21 Francine *24
Who is online
Users browsing this forum: Google Adsense [Bot], LAF92 and 51 guests