Hurricane Andrew wrote:Miami, do you have a link to that? Sure didn't look that strong to me.
I just added it to the post. At 96 hours, there is a 35-m/s contour (dark green) near Jacksonville.
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MiamiensisWx wrote:Dean4Storms wrote:NDG wrote:12z euro is a little stronger than previous runs, it hangs the low pressure just north of the Yucatan Peninsula through the next 48-72 hrs.
Takes it into the Big Bend area of Florida near Cedar Key.
12z Canadian has a 70kt Hurricane into Appalachicola.
The 12Z ECMWF is actually 20 kt stronger than in the 00Z run. It shows 850-mb winds of 35 m/s at the time of landfall in four days near Cedar Key. This translates to 61 kt / 70 mph at the surface. So the ECMWF now shows a near-hurricane hit, albeit with most winds displaced well to the east of the center. Even strong tropical storms can be somewhat disorganized, but the trough seems to impart divergence which is co-located with the low-level center, thereby minimizing the negative impacts of the shear.
12Z ECMWF at 96 hours
This means very high tides along the west coast of FL due to the large wind field and the angle of approach. Tides could easily be 5-6' above mean sea level from the Everglades National Park to north of Tarpon Springs--according to the track shown by the ECMWF. No one should be complacent; even a large but disorganized TS produced quite a bit of beach erosion and flooding on the Gulf Coast.
MiamiensisWx wrote:The 12Z ECMWF is actually 20 kt stronger than in the 00Z run. It shows 850-mb winds of 35 m/s at the time of landfall in four days near Cedar Key. This translates to 61 kt / 70 mph at the surface. So the ECMWF now shows a near-hurricane hit, albeit with most winds displaced well to the east of the center. Even strong tropical storms can be somewhat disorganized, but the trough seems to impart divergence which is co-located with the low-level center, thereby minimizing the negative impacts of the shear.
12Z ECMWF at 96 hours
This means very high tides along the west coast of FL due to the large wind field and the angle of approach. Tides could easily be 5-6' above mean sea level from the Everglades National Park to north of Tarpon Springs--according to the track shown by the ECMWF. No one should be complacent; even a large but disorganized TS produced quite a bit of beach erosion and flooding on the Gulf Coast.
caneman wrote:Hey, you're up in our neck of the woods now. Weren't you in Miami before?
MiamiensisWx wrote:Dean4Storms wrote:NDG wrote:12z euro is a little stronger than previous runs, it hangs the low pressure just north of the Yucatan Peninsula through the next 48-72 hrs.
Takes it into the Big Bend area of Florida near Cedar Key.
12z Canadian has a 70kt Hurricane into Appalachicola.
The 12Z ECMWF is actually 20 kt stronger than in the 00Z run. It shows 850-mb winds of 35 m/s at the time of landfall in four days near Cedar Key. This translates to 61 kt / 70 mph at the surface. So the ECMWF now shows a near-hurricane hit, albeit with most winds displaced well to the east of the center. Even strong tropical storms can be somewhat disorganized, but the trough seems to impart divergence which is co-located with the low-level center, thereby minimizing the negative impacts of the shear.
12Z ECMWF at 96 hours
This means very high tides along the west coast of FL due to the large wind field and the angle of approach. Tides could easily be 5-6' above mean sea level from the Everglades National Park to north of Tarpon Springs--according to the track shown by the ECMWF. No one should be complacent; even a large but disorganized TS produced quite a bit of beach erosion and flooding on the Gulf Coast.
wxman57 wrote:Here's a screen shot of the 96hr EC. Elongated low across north FL. About 1004mb in NE Gulf. Looks more like a trof axis/frontal boundary extending SW from the low(s). Lots of 20-25 kt winds from the SW into FL. I get the high-res Euro in 3hr intervals now:
JonathanBelles wrote:Latest Ruskin discussion...
LOWER LCLS CAN BE EXPECTED THANKS TO THE TROPICAL NATURE OF THE
AIRMASS...WITH THE 12Z GFS FEATURING AROUND A 700 FT LCL FOR TPA...A
500 FT LCL AT SRQ...A 600 FT LCL AT LAL...AND A 700-800 FT LCL AT
FMY AROUND 18Z THURSDAY...WHICH IS CONDUCIVE FOR TORNADOES. WITH THE
LOW FORECAST TO PASS WEST OF THE AREA...THE LOW LEVEL JET ON THE
RIGHT SIDE OF THE SYSTEM WILL BE ACCESSIBLE TO POTENTIAL TORNADIC
CONVECTION. THE 12Z GFS AND 00Z ECMWF ARE CONSISTENT WITH AN
INCREASING 0-1 KM HELICITY TREND STARTING AT 00Z THURSDAY...WITH
VALUES PEAKING BETWEEN 100-200 M2/S2 ACROSS MUCH OF THE CWA ON
THURSDAY AFTERNOON. 0-1 KM BULK SHEAR VALUES EASILY PEAKING ABOVE
20-25 KNOTS ALSO RAISES A LARGE RED FLAG FOR TORNADIC ACTIVITY. 0-6
KM BULK SHEAR VALUES OF 25-35 KNOTS ARE RESPECTABLE.
MiamiensisWx wrote:Dean4Storms wrote:NDG wrote:12z euro is a little stronger than previous runs, it hangs the low pressure just north of the Yucatan Peninsula through the next 48-72 hrs.
Takes it into the Big Bend area of Florida near Cedar Key.
12z Canadian has a 70kt Hurricane into Appalachicola.
The 12Z ECMWF is actually 20 kt stronger than in the 00Z run. It shows 850-mb winds of 35 m/s at the time of landfall in four days near Cedar Key. This translates to 61 kt / 70 mph at the surface. So the ECMWF now shows a near-hurricane hit, albeit with most winds displaced well to the east of the center. Even strong tropical storms can be somewhat disorganized, but the trough seems to impart divergence which is co-located with the low-level center, thereby minimizing the negative impacts of the shear.
12Z ECMWF at 96 hours
This means very high tides along the west coast of FL due to the large wind field and the angle of approach. Tides could easily be 5-6' above mean sea level from the Everglades National Park to north of Tarpon Springs--according to the track shown by the ECMWF. No one should be complacent; even a large but disorganized TS produced quite a bit of beach erosion and flooding on the Gulf Coast.
MiamiensisWx wrote:caneman wrote:Hey, you're up in our neck of the woods now. Weren't you in Miami before?
Hello, neighbor! Yes, I once lived in the Miami metro area, meaning SE Florida, in Boca Raton to be exact. I just started attending college at USF Saint Petersburg in Pinellas County this spring. I am currently back in Boca for summer break, but I will return to St. Pete for the fall and spring semesters of 2013-2014. So my real "home" is in St. Pete. What a special city...but more vulnerable to storm surge than in SE FL, thanks to the shallow Gulf shelf. Anyway, too many people who don't live on the Gulf do not know why we take even messy tropical storms seriously due to the surge. The ECMWF is showing a large storm at LF, meaning more of a fetch / surge hazard for the FL Gulf Coast from near Naples to near Cedar Key.
Andrew, since 1 m/s = 1.94 kt, I multiplied 35 m/s*1.94 kt = 67.9 kt at 850 mb. Since the NHC uses about a 90% reduction factor, I got 61 kt (70 mph) at 10 m (the surface).
Edit: Ah, never mind. Thanks to wxman57 for correcting me.
Miami Storm Tracker wrote:JonathanBelles wrote:Latest Ruskin discussion...
LOWER LCLS CAN BE EXPECTED THANKS TO THE TROPICAL NATURE OF THE
AIRMASS...WITH THE 12Z GFS FEATURING AROUND A 700 FT LCL FOR TPA...A
500 FT LCL AT SRQ...A 600 FT LCL AT LAL...AND A 700-800 FT LCL AT
FMY AROUND 18Z THURSDAY...WHICH IS CONDUCIVE FOR TORNADOES. WITH THE
LOW FORECAST TO PASS WEST OF THE AREA...THE LOW LEVEL JET ON THE
RIGHT SIDE OF THE SYSTEM WILL BE ACCESSIBLE TO POTENTIAL TORNADIC
CONVECTION. THE 12Z GFS AND 00Z ECMWF ARE CONSISTENT WITH AN
INCREASING 0-1 KM HELICITY TREND STARTING AT 00Z THURSDAY...WITH
VALUES PEAKING BETWEEN 100-200 M2/S2 ACROSS MUCH OF THE CWA ON
THURSDAY AFTERNOON. 0-1 KM BULK SHEAR VALUES EASILY PEAKING ABOVE
20-25 KNOTS ALSO RAISES A LARGE RED FLAG FOR TORNADIC ACTIVITY. 0-6
KM BULK SHEAR VALUES OF 25-35 KNOTS ARE RESPECTABLE.
Is this for the Ruskin area?
Alyono wrote:the standard reduction, which does not apply in this case, is 80 percent from 850mb, not 90. 90 is from 700
GCANE wrote:Evil Jeremy wrote:
GCANE, is that in the low or mid level winds?
Its not surface, more about 850 to 700mb level.
SouthDadeFish wrote:This was from earlier today, but it shows the broad, elongated center taking shape:
http://img62.imageshack.us/img62/4435/2 ... wind91.jpg
Edit: Luis I noticed you just beat me haha. You can remove my post if you wish.
Evil Jeremy wrote:Well that ASCAT (man I miss QUIKSCAT) coincides with what GCANE posted earlier. Still can't see a circulation there on satellite though.
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