Really there shouldn't be any speculation on the long term track of a system, that is hardly organized.
Secondly this ridge breaker that you speak of is at the tail end of a front... There is an ULL to the East of the dying front. However, if anything were to form at the surface off of the Carolina's, it should have too much effect on a 500mb ridge. Storms tend to ride the ridge until they find a weak point...
I would be more concerned about the ULL that is between 20-30N and 60-70W, as far as potential movement of this ill defined area of low pressure. The ULL might not even have much effect on the track of the wave itself, unless the low deepens and is more in tune with the mid-upper levels, where the Mid-Upper Level Low is located.
The thing with Dean was, most of the models were fairly/moderately consistent with the track, (I don't mean every run of every model) but the average of them showed him moving to the west, and the deal breaker with Dean was dependant on that ULL in the Gulf, whether it moved west, and it did.
I wouldn't watch so much with surface features ahead of a system trailing a couple thousand miles behind. Watch GFS in the upper levels in the long range forecasts to see if you see any similarities, that may end up effecting the ridge. Even though GFS is, "horrible" at long range forecasts... It did get Dean fairly well....
http://cimss.ssec.wisc.edu/tropic/real-time/atlantic/winds/wg8vor1.htmlhttp://hadar.cira.colostate.edu/ramsdis/online/trop_ge_wv_ls_0.htmlhttp://cimss.ssec.wisc.edu/tropic/real-time/atlantic/winds/wg8dlm5.html94L is sitting under a developing/weak upper ridge, I wonder if the SAL really is suppressing convection that much...
http://cimss.ssec.wisc.edu/tropic/real-time/atlantic/winds/wg8shr.htmlCrazyC83 wrote:Recurve wrote:I'm wondering about the low thingy off the carolinas weakening the atl ridge before getting swept away with this wave approaching the area and possibly developing a high fills back in. I do not want to see anything drift north of the Antilles and get stuck on a NW track in the hot zone, if you know what I mean.
That has the best potential of being a ridge-breaker and sending this northward. Otherwise, I see it taking the same route Dean took.