96L for Caribbean System
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Matt-hurricanewatcher
- Scott_inVA
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Model concensus and climo suggest NW near Cozumel and into western GOM off TX.
FWIW, I think a solution more in the central Gulf coast will verify.
Scott
Mid-Atlantic WX.com
Lexington, VA
http://www.midatlanticwx.com/modelmap.htm
FWIW, I think a solution more in the central Gulf coast will verify.
Scott
Mid-Atlantic WX.com
Lexington, VA
http://www.midatlanticwx.com/modelmap.htm
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- cycloneye
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Scott_inVA wrote:Model concensus and climo suggest NW near Cozumel and into western GOM off TX.
FWIW, I think a solution more in the central Gulf coast will verify.
Scott
Mid-Atlantic WX.com
Lexington, VA
http://www.midatlanticwx.com/modelmap.htm
Scott consensus except LBAR which goes way right why it is the only one doing that?
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Visit the Caribbean-Central America Weather Thread where you can find at first post web cams,radars
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- x-y-no
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Agua wrote:AL Chili Pepper wrote:And what's up with that xtrap? Isn't that supposed to be the current motion?
xtrap = extrapolated
Yes, average direction over the last 12 hours.
Average direction of what? I'm still just seeing a wave, albeit a sharper one with a fair amount of convection going.
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Matt-hurricanewatcher
There doe's appear to be a low near 18.0 north/82.5 as the models show. In a increase in overall convection. This area has also moved by what the dotted line has shown. A expect a landfall over the northeast coast of the Yact over the next 12 to 15 hours. Then it will likely move out into the Gulf by early Monday.
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- AL Chili Pepper
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Agua wrote:AL Chili Pepper wrote:And what's up with that xtrap? Isn't that supposed to be the current motion?
xtrap = extrapolated
Yes, average direction over the last 12 hours.
OK, thanks..that's what I thought. I just didn't think it'd been moving NW. Guess I'll have to keep a better eye on it.
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x-y-no wrote:Agua wrote:AL Chili Pepper wrote:And what's up with that xtrap? Isn't that supposed to be the current motion?
xtrap = extrapolated
Yes, average direction over the last 12 hours.
Average direction of what? I'm still just seeing a wave, albeit a sharper one with a fair amount of convection going.
Agreed. That's why these earliest models are supposedly pretty useless. They don't even have a real center for initialization.
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- Lowpressure
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- Scott_inVA
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cycloneye wrote:
Scott consensus except LBAR which goes way right why it is the only one doing that?
Being a barotropic model I'm guessing weakening Ridge and possible weak UL off TX. I do worry *anytime* I think a potential path is represented by the LBAR
Scott
Mid-Atlantic WX.com,
Lexington, VA
http://www.midatlanticwx.com/modelmap.htm
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- wxman57
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This image may help. Note the ship report at 17.1N/82.7W (in orange). It shows an east wind at 10 kts and 1012mb pressure. That position is southwest of where the models initialized. So if there IS any LLC tring to form, it's not where they initialized the models. Far as I can see, we have a wave there. Shows up very clearly on the obs. Again, the usual discaimer about the crappy satellite on VPN at home...
<img src="http://myweb.cableone.net/nolasue/carib9.gif">
<img src="http://myweb.cableone.net/nolasue/carib9.gif">
Last edited by wxman57 on Sat Jul 02, 2005 3:12 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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- cycloneye
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Yes agree 57 as after I saw those inciations from the models something was not right and after your as always complete explanations with the great pics you post at the forum there is no doubt the position that the models have is not the right one.Unless there is a tiny low that the garp does not see. 
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Visit the Caribbean-Central America Weather Thread where you can find at first post web cams,radars
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- wxman57
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ivanhater wrote:what are the chances of this becoming a TD by tomorrow?
I'd say maybe 5%. Maybe less. First it needs persistent convection over a single area for 12-24 hours. Then it needs an LLC to form. But 24 hours from now it'll be over land. Most of Sunday evening through Monday morning it'll probably be over land. So the earliest TD might be Monday afternoon/evening.
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Stratosphere747
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wxman57 wrote:ivanhater wrote:what are the chances of this becoming a TD by tomorrow?
I'd say maybe 5%. Maybe less. First it needs persistent convection over a single area for 12-24 hours. Then it needs an LLC to form. But 24 hours from now it'll be over land. Most of Sunday evening through Monday morning it'll probably be over land. So the earliest TD might be Monday afternoon/evening.
Still looking for whatever that may possibly develop, to take more of a northly type of component towards La?
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- wxman57
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Stratosphere747 wrote:wxman57 wrote:ivanhater wrote:what are the chances of this becoming a TD by tomorrow?
I'd say maybe 5%. Maybe less. First it needs persistent convection over a single area for 12-24 hours. Then it needs an LLC to form. But 24 hours from now it'll be over land. Most of Sunday evening through Monday morning it'll probably be over land. So the earliest TD might be Monday afternoon/evening.
Still looking for whatever that may possibly develop, to take more of a northly type of component towards La?
Most likely, any development would head for northern Mexico or the lower TX coast. It would have to develop sooner and farther north to reach the LA coast.
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