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wxman57 wrote:I expect we'll see a westward jog in the guidance overnight. I'm quite skeptical of the NW motion that the models were initialized with, and I don't buy the initial northward motion by the GFS/GFDL/HWRF. With the upper low sinking south, the convection and surface low probably won't move north over the next 24 hrs. My first track is toward the TX/LA border with landfall mid morning Sunday. We've seen that the models are having a very hard time with predicting the upper-level winds more than a day or so out, so I have low confidence in the intensity forecasts. I am sticking closer to the ECMWF track for now and ignoring the BAM models in the subtropics. Lots of shear now, but if landfall isn't until Saturday or Sunday there should be plenty of time for it to become a hurricane. My best estimate for farthest west and farthest east landfalls would be Matagorda Bay (Victoria, TX) to the west and the western Florida panhandle to the east. Sounds like a big area, but if you locate the center then draw lines to each of these areas it doesn't take too much of a track shift to go from mid TX to SE LA coasts. Could be a TD by tomorrow afternoon.
cycloneye wrote:wxman57 wrote:I expect we'll see a westward jog in the guidance overnight. I'm quite skeptical of the NW motion that the models were initialized with, and I don't buy the initial northward motion by the GFS/GFDL/HWRF. With the upper low sinking south, the convection and surface low probably won't move north over the next 24 hrs. My first track is toward the TX/LA border with landfall mid morning Sunday. We've seen that the models are having a very hard time with predicting the upper-level winds more than a day or so out, so I have low confidence in the intensity forecasts. I am sticking closer to the ECMWF track for now and ignoring the BAM models in the subtropics. Lots of shear now, but if landfall isn't until Saturday or Sunday there should be plenty of time for it to become a hurricane. My best estimate for farthest west and farthest east landfalls would be Matagorda Bay (Victoria, TX) to the west and the western Florida panhandle to the east. Sounds like a big area, but if you locate the center then draw lines to each of these areas it doesn't take too much of a track shift to go from mid TX to SE LA coasts. Could be a TD by tomorrow afternoon.
57,you think pure tropical or subtropical TD?
Normandy wrote:Air Force Met wrote:miamicanes177 wrote:SHIPS has the shear below 10kts for the crucial time of 36-84 hours when it is over the highest heat content and 30 deg C SST. This is how I come up with the solution Jerry will be huge. Humberto did not have much time at all and look what it did. This will have plenty of time over water. The tropics can do amazing things with the right environment.
I guess you missed my post about the SHIPS...and the reason it is showing 10 knots of shear during that time period is because this system is going to be under the upper low...so its not under 10 kts of anticyclonic outflow...its under 10 kts of cyclonic flow...
That is a big difference....and an important one.
Which ULL? The one diving WSW from Fl right now? The low level center would need to start haulin to catch up with that ULL....is the ULL suppose to stall out in the GOM?
Matt-hurricanewatcher wrote:Wind Speed (WSPD): 38 kts
Wind Gust (GST): 42 kts
http://www.ndbc.noaa.gov/station_page.php?station=SPGF1
Looks like if it where to be upgraded it would be a tropical storm.
shannon wrote:In regards to SE florida, what day are we looking at this affecting us the most? We had some good rains early this morning and a refreshing breezy afternoon. Could I expect something a little more significant in the terms of wind? I expect and anticipate the rain, thats for sure. I am in PB county and just wondered what to expect. Thanks.
jhamps10 wrote:JB's thoughts on video, FREE folks,
http://www.accuweather.com/video-on-dem ... PenStoneJB
wxman57 wrote:Could be a TD by tomorrow afternoon.
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