They key is will it get blown off by the shear or
sustain itself. That's the $100,000.00 question.
http://www.rap.ucar.edu/weather/satelli ... uration=12
quote="redfish1"]
what are you seeing i could not pull it up?[/quote]
Moderator: S2k Moderators
Sean in New Orleans wrote:We'll see....it's the Gulf and it is August. I expect a moderate tropical storm out of this...nothing more, but, dry air is leaving the area. This could be a decent rainmaker....with nasty wind, but, not anything destructive. We'll know a whole lot tomorrow. It has just formed.
BigB0882 wrote:One second it is "this thing is really looking good" then next it is "wow, POOF" and now someone else sees convection on the increase again. This storm has kept it interesting, lol!
BigB0882 wrote:Can anyone explain why the NHC track shows it going NW and then suddenly more WNW before lifting N and finally NE? What would cause a sudden more W movement before being shunted to the NE? That doesn't make much sense to me.
redfish1 wrote:
would that effect its track?
StormClouds63 wrote:Bonnie, part II ... perhaps a bit stronger with more moisture. Right now, as Wx-Warrior so elegantly put it, a pure mess.
TD-5 the only game in town ... switch still stuck in "off" position.
AFWeather wrote:If this thing does beat the odds and intensify, it will be interesting to see what environmental effects even a weak cat 1 storm surge would have on the oil spill area.
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 5 guests