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Air Force Met wrote:
I agree the trof axis goes through there...but the center is down near the convection. I see w ward moving cu at 24.8...94.
If you just trace the cu field movement around the edges of the overcast...and figure the circulation is in the center of that trace...its at around 24/94
KWT wrote:Air Force Met wrote:
I agree the trof axis goes through there...but the center is down near the convection. I see w ward moving cu at 24.8...94.
If you just trace the cu field movement around the edges of the overcast...and figure the circulation is in the center of that trace...its at around 24/94
Just had a look and I agree with you, I'd say its on the northern side of the convection but I can see obvious curving of the LLC on the loops drawing down into the convection which would strongly suggesat any center is down in the convection right now, you can just make it out underneath the high clouds on the northern edge of the convection with the low level clouds moving southwards into the convection...
I grant you its not that obvious and I probably wouldn't have clocked it if you hadn't pointed it out but yeah I do see it now on the higher resolution Vis.imagery.
Over my head wrote:Couple times today I have heard (read) members posts say the rain we are having in SETX is 96L related. Is it? Or is it Remnants of Alex or even 95L...or something all by itself not related to any other system out there?
Over my head wrote:Couple times today I have heard (read) members posts say the rain we are having in SETX is 96L related. Is it? Or is it Remnants of Alex or even 95L...or something all by itself not related to any other system out there?
edited to learn to put images in posts correctly.
djones65 wrote:Looking at recon data from the NOAA P-3 research aircraft shows we have a developing circulation east of 94.4W... The aircraft is flying at 640 mb height and as we saw from yesterday's data their surface pressure extrapolation may not be reliable... However, the aircraft passed from east to west along 26N and reported SE winds of 32 knots at flight level (maybe higher because I didn't get all the data) with an extrapolated pressure of 1004 mb to the NE of the estimated center on satellite. To the NW of the center estimated on satellite they found NE winds of 30 knots and extrapolated surface pressure of 1002 mb near 24.8N and 95.5W The aircraft then traveled due south along longitude 95.5W and reported due north and then northwest and west northwest winds of 15 knots at flight level, but SFMR estimated 30 knots near 22.8N and 94.4W. The aircraft is heading northeast towards where I believe a low level circulation is located and perhaps we could get a vortex message within the next half hour. If the SFMR of 30 knots in SW quadrant is accurate, I would not be surprised to see tropical storm force winds on the NE quadrant. This of course is just my opinion and is not official... But I would not be surprised to see advisories on tropical storm Bonnie later initiated later tonight... Also, latest satellite IR shows some deep convection redeveloping just south of the center.
so do you think the center is to the northeast of where everyone else thinks it is right now?
this is in no way official information and simply my opinion.
Macrocane wrote:lonelymike wrote:Indeed the pro mets in here are nice enough to share their opinions with us and don't need to get bashed or questioned. Having had friends go through met school at FSU I can tell you its no easy major. So disagree with a smile if you must. I would hate to lose the opinions of wxman57, Air Force Met or Truesms and others like them because of ill considered comments.
And if they leave the only show in town will be the Euro wars nightly with Crock and Ivan :D
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I find interesting how even the pro-mets sometimes disagree, and in cases like 96L they tend to disagree more, I really appreciate all of their opinions.
ozonepete wrote:Over my head wrote:Couple times today I have heard (read) members posts say the rain we are having in SETX is 96L related. Is it? Or is it Remnants of Alex or even 95L...or something all by itself not related to any other system out there?
All by itself. It is coming from areas of stong convection (thunderstorms) rotating from south to north along a trough (see the dotted line in the western Gulf) that lies along the western edge of a very strong Bermuda High anchored over the east/southeast U.S.
lonelymike wrote:Indeed the pro mets in here are nice enough to share their opinions with us and don't need to get bashed or questioned. Having had friends go through met school at FSU I can tell you its no easy major. So disagree with a smile if you must. I would hate to lose the opinions of wxman57, Air Force Met or Truesms and others like them because of ill considered comments.
And if they leave the only show in town will be the Euro wars nightly with Crock and Ivan :D
wxman57 wrote:ozonepete wrote:wx88 wrote:I think someone may be blinded by a free lunch. I think it is a TD already.
Yeah, wxman57. Looks like your lunch will be crow.
You really think NHC will upgrade within the next 1hr 45 min? Not likely. The bet was by 7pm CDT tonight, not ever.
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