
The top analog's just ironic (and also way off on intensity), but the second analog...

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Dean4Storms wrote:Dean4Storms wrote:I'm not convinced this goes OTS, latest GFS has a much weaker trough off the New England Coast by Oct.5th and the Trough in the upper plains further north looking more like the energy there heads up into Canada. I think there is a real possibility that ridging builds back from the Atlantic back into the Mid-Atlantic to New England and Mathew gets trapped.
I think the 12z ECM Operational is onto something with that!
sandy18 wrote:00z models show the westward jog...
http://www.tropicaltidbits.com/storminf ... latest.png
Doesn't look too good for the Carolinas
What do you mean it doesn't look good for the Carolinas? looks like it is staying off shore or am I not looking at something right?
sandy18 wrote:00z models show the westward jog...
http://www.tropicaltidbits.com/storminf ... latest.png
Doesn't look too good for the Carolinas
What do you mean it doesn't look good for the Carolinas? looks like it is staying off shore or am I not looking at something right?
gatorcane wrote:00Z NAM which uses NCEP data the GFS uses already shows a stronger Bermuda High from the 18Z run right off the bat. I wonder if the data NHC is collecting is going into the models! Also might this mean yet another slight west shift with the 00Z GFS?
gatorcane wrote:00Z NAM which uses NCEP data the GFS uses already shows a stronger Bermuda High from the 18Z run right off the bat at hour 00. I wonder if the data NHC is collecting is going into the models? Also might this mean yet another slight west shift with the 00Z GFS?
sunnyday wrote:East, west, left, right.....Look at everyone so concerned for their safety and having no idea what is going to happen, when, or where. If only we had something reliable enough to let us know 4 or 5 days out what was about to happen. It takes a while to put up shutters and make final preparations for a monster storm! And the evacuation could turn into a huge gridlock if the people weren't notified in time.....
It's really scary to be told after one model run that the storm is going more east and then the very next run, we are told it is going west.
I'm sure the NHC is working hard and doing its best. It's just an uneasy feeling to be this close to a giant hurricane and feel like the future is so uncertain.....
gatorcane wrote:00Z NAM which uses NCEP data the GFS uses already shows a stronger Bermuda High from the 18Z run right off the bat at hour 0. I wonder if the NHC is putting more data into the models? Also might this mean yet another slight west shift with the 00Z GFS?
SouthFLTropics wrote:sunnyday wrote:East, west, left, right.....Look at everyone so concerned for their safety and having no idea what is going to happen, when, or where. If only we had something reliable enough to let us know 4 or 5 days out what was about to happen. It takes a while to put up shutters and make final preparations for a monster storm! And the evacuation could turn into a huge gridlock if the people weren't notified in time.....
It's really scary to be told after one model run that the storm is going more east and then the very next run, we are told it is going west.
I'm sure the NHC is working hard and doing its best. It's just an uneasy feeling to be this close to a giant hurricane and feel like the future is so uncertain.....
Evacuation of South Florida from an approaching major from the South is a nightmare scenario. Contra flow would have to be implemented in order to try and move that many people out.
sunnyday wrote:East, west, left, right.....Look at everyone so concerned for their safety and having no idea what is going to happen, when, or where. If only we had something reliable enough to let us know 4 or 5 days out what was about to happen. It takes a while to put up shutters and make final preparations for a monster storm! And the evacuation could turn into a huge gridlock if the people weren't notified in time.....
It's really scary to be told after one model run that the storm is going more east and then the very next run, we are told it is going west.
I'm sure the NHC is working hard and doing its best. It's just an uneasy feeling to be this close to a giant hurricane and feel like the future is so uncertain.....
wxman57 wrote:Most of those models listed at 00Z are pretty bad. You certainly don't want to use the BAM models. LBAR is terrible, OCD5 is climo-based, and the Navy variations of the GFDL are terrible. Of the models there, the TVCA (consensus model) is the best. It's also well east of the other (bad) models. HWRF has been quite inconsistent and can't be trusted. The AVNI is based on the 18Z GFS. Real 00Z models won't come in for 2-4 hours.
http://www.ral.ucar.edu/hurricanes/real ... _early.png
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