chaser1 wrote:AJC3 wrote:Blown Away wrote:https://i.imgur.com/0GrJ7yX.jpg
https://i.imgur.com/8pILmfg.jpg
King may be the best analog for Eta. VortexFl posted links.
I was just about to post something along this line. The synoptic setup is pretty much textbook for a N-NW "slingshot" into Florida. Cutoff low over the GOMEX shears out into a negative tilt trough, with a strong blocking ridge over the western Atlantic and eastern U.S. coast. It's hard for me to envision this *not* having a significant impact on Florida.
Agreed. I think a reasonable wind event would range anywhere from a weak T.S to a Cat 1 hurricane. The biggest key however may be unlike King '50 where that storm took a pretty straight path right up the spine of Florida. If next week verifies, I'd think it could be a broader "nuisance" wind event possibly impacting many more people over a larger area. Precip impact might be tremendous if the system stalls or tracks erratically, or actually pulls off a hat-trick Florida landfall (Keys or S. Fla, then bend west over Central Fla. into the GOM, then north or NE over the Big Bend. Like always, timing will impact intensity and track. I'm thinking perhaps some blended average between the operational GFS-Para and Euro for ultimate track & timing, and the HWRF for plausible intensity.
My thoughts were most likely a mid-high end hybrid STS/TS type system (50-60kt) with a ceiling of weak cat 1 (65-70kt). The fact that it will get tangled up with a mid-upper trough should cap its intensity, however these BE (baroclincally enhanced) systems can surprise you sometimes (e.g. 9 OCT 2011).