Ntxw wrote:calmbeforestorm1 wrote:The following post is NOT an official forecast and should not be used as such. It is just the opinion of the poster and may or may not be backed by sound meteorological data. It is NOT endorsed by any professional institution including storm2k.org. For Official Information please refer to the NHC and NWS products.
I'm actually a bit concerned with this system and I'll tell you why. The GFDL is now showing a Cat 4 hurricane in the yucatan channel at 5 days and if you look at the upper level flow at that point a powerful hurricane would still be steered in the general direction of Florida. The GFDL and now the Bams are the only models to get this system as far north as Jamaica while forming it but the BAMS never get it strong while the GFDL does. Current loops show the system is almost as far north as Jamaica right now. A stronger system that far north would not be driven into C.A. or the lower yucatan as suggested by the models that show a much weaker system being driven west by the strong westerly flow, especialy at lower latitudes. IF you look at the 18z GFS at the 500mb and 300 mb levels, this pattern is clearly evident.
http://moe.met.fsu.edu/cgi-bin/gfstc2.c ... =Animationandhttp://moe.met.fsu.edu/cgi-bin/gfstc ... =Animation The bottom line is that I feel is that if this system gets strong quickly, inside 96 hours, I feel it is going to make it north of Cuba.
Every global model (the high has already formed) has a strong high pressure to it's north acting as wall shortly through the 5 days and beyond. It would be strong easterly flow moving it w/wsw. But with calm conditions to it's north due to the high, I can see how the scenario of a strong tropical cyclone can play out. People in the Peripheral of the Caribbean should keep a close watch.
Any system this time of year that is festering in the NW Carib where 99L needs to be watched in Florida. Just think, this past weekend, models showed it slamming into Central America through Southern Nicaragua. Now look where it has ended up.
The GFDL is certainly an eye-opener as it brings a CAT 4 to just west of the Western tip of Cuba. Looks like it would be in position to get steered N or NE ahead of a trough in classic late October fashion.
Thankfully, GFDL is an outlier at the moment.