Tropical Storm Dennis
Moderator: S2k Moderators
Forum rules
The posts in this forum are NOT official forecasts and should not be used as such. They are just the opinion of the poster and may or may not be backed by sound meteorological data. They are NOT endorsed by any professional institution or STORM2K. For official information, please refer to products from the National Hurricane Center and National Weather Service.
- cycloneye
- Admin

- Posts: 148503
- Age: 69
- Joined: Thu Oct 10, 2002 10:54 am
- Location: San Juan, Puerto Rico
TCDAT4
TROPICAL STORM DENNIS DISCUSSION NUMBER 7
NWS TPC/NATIONAL HURRICANE CENTER MIAMI FL
11 AM EDT WED JUL 06 2005
DENNIS APPEARS TO BE VERY CLOSE TO HURRICANE STRENGTH...BUT THE
INNER CORE SEEMS TO STILL BE IN THE ORGANIZING STAGES. 12Z DVORAK
CLASSIFICATIONS WERE T4.0/65 KT FROM TAFB AND T3.5/55 KT FROM
SAB...AND THE ADVISORY INTENSITY WILL COMPROMISE AT 60 KT. THE
CONVECTIVE TOPS OF THE BANDING EVIDENT AT 12Z HAVE SINCE WARMED
SLIGHTLY...BUT A NEW CONVECTIVE BURST HAS RECENTLY OCCURRED NEAR
THE ESTIMATED CENTER LOCATION. AN AIR FORCE RECONNAISSANCE AIRCRAFT
IS SCHEDULED TO INVESTIGATE DENNIS THIS AFTERNOON TO BETTER
DETERMINE THE INTENSITY. OCEANIC AND ATMOSPHERIC CONDITIONS ARE
FORECAST TO REMAIN FAVORABLE THROUGHOUT THE FIVE-DAY FORECAST
PERIOD... INCLUDING WARM WATERS IN THE NORTHWESTERN CARIBBEAN SEA
AND GULF OF MEXICO...AND WEAK VERTICAL WIND SHEAR AS INDICATED BY
MOST OF THE GLOBAL MODEL GUIDANCE. THE OFFICIAL INTENSITY FORECAST
IS SIMILAR TO THE PREVIOUS ADVISORY AND TO THE LATEST GFDL RUN IN
BRINGING DENNIS TO MAJOR HURRICANE STATUS BY 48 HOURS.
THE INITIAL MOTION ESTIMATE IS 290/13. THE SUBTROPICAL RIDGE
CURRENTLY CENTERED NORTH OF CUBA IS THE PRIMARY MECHANISM THAT
SHOULD STEER DENNIS GENERALLY TOWARD THE WEST-NORTHWEST FOR ABOUT
THE NEXT THREE DAYS UNTIL IT CROSSES CUBA. THEREAFTER...A GRADUAL
TURN TO THE RIGHT AROUND THE WESTERN PERIPHERY OF THE RIDGE IS
EXPECTED. THE DYNAMICAL MODEL GUIDANCE IS IN VERY CLOSE AGREEMENT
THROUGH DAY THREE...BUT WITH SOME DIVERGENCE THEREAFTER OVER THE
GULF OF MEXICO...WITH THE GFS ON THE LEFT AND THE
GFDL...UKMET...AND NOGAPS ON THE RIGHT. THE OFFICIAL FORECAST
REMAINS SIMILAR TO THE PREVIOUS ADVISORY AND IS VERY CLOSE TO A
CONSENSUS OF THE DYNAMICAL MODELS...INCLUDING THE FASTER CONU AND
THE SLOWER FLORIDA STATE UNIVERSITY SUPERENSEMBLE. IT IS IMPORTANT
TO EMPHASIZE THAT FORECAST ERRORS AT THESE LONGER RANGES CAN BE
QUITE LARGE...AND ONE SHOULD NOT FOCUS ON THE EXACT TRACK FORECAST.
FORECASTER KNABB
FORECAST POSITIONS AND MAX WINDS
INITIAL 06/1500Z 15.4N 71.5W 60 KT
12HR VT 07/0000Z 16.5N 73.5W 65 KT
24HR VT 07/1200Z 18.1N 76.1W 75 KT
36HR VT 08/0000Z 19.8N 78.7W 90 KT
48HR VT 08/1200Z 21.1N 80.9W 100 KT
72HR VT 09/1200Z 23.5N 84.0W 100 KT
96HR VT 10/1200Z 27.0N 85.5W 100 KT
120HR VT 11/1200Z 30.5N 87.0W 100 KT...INLAND
0 likes
Visit the Caribbean-Central America Weather Thread where you can find at first post web cams,radars
and observations from Caribbean basin members Click Here
and observations from Caribbean basin members Click Here
- TreasureIslandFLGal
- S2K Supporter

- Posts: 1584
- Age: 57
- Joined: Sun Aug 15, 2004 6:16 pm
- Location: Cancun, Mexico (northeast Yucatan coast)
Slowing down could mean a few different things down the road. Normally, a slowing down indicates a change in direction, in this case, taking a more northerly route sooner. But a maintenance of a slower speed would allow the weakness to become a non-issue if Dennis misses it and the ridge has time to build back. But a considerable slow down, or even a stall or loop-d-loops could enable a completely different synoptic set up time to get itself established.
IMO, a slowing down is indicative of Dennis taking on a more northerly component to its motion. It will barely make the connection with the weakening trough. I think it will pass closer to the western coast of Florida than the models are indicating, but far enough away that there is no major impact anywhere on the FL west coast. Then I feel that it will be jostled in a more NW direction by the returning ridge's influence and ultimately end up where the model consensus is now. It will end up in the same place, but take a different path to get there in MHO.
-1st further west/south (not north of jamaica but clipping western Jamaica)
-2nd turnign more northerly to cut across western Cuba
-3rd run parallel to the FL west coast within 150 miles until even with about Orlando before
-4th taking a NW turn and heading into Mobile area as a strong Cat 3/borderline Cat 4.
IMO, a slowing down is indicative of Dennis taking on a more northerly component to its motion. It will barely make the connection with the weakening trough. I think it will pass closer to the western coast of Florida than the models are indicating, but far enough away that there is no major impact anywhere on the FL west coast. Then I feel that it will be jostled in a more NW direction by the returning ridge's influence and ultimately end up where the model consensus is now. It will end up in the same place, but take a different path to get there in MHO.
-1st further west/south (not north of jamaica but clipping western Jamaica)
-2nd turnign more northerly to cut across western Cuba
-3rd run parallel to the FL west coast within 150 miles until even with about Orlando before
-4th taking a NW turn and heading into Mobile area as a strong Cat 3/borderline Cat 4.
0 likes
-
rsdoug1981
- Tropical Storm

- Posts: 184
- Joined: Tue Aug 31, 2004 4:22 pm
- Location: Canton, MS
-
Air Force Met
- Military Met

- Posts: 4372
- Age: 56
- Joined: Tue Jul 08, 2003 9:30 am
- Location: Roan Mountain, TN
Roxy wrote:AIRFORCEMET:
are these models going to keep shifting west, or is the shifting done? I know you may not know...but dear lord, everytime they run it's west, west, west!!
What's the deal.?
And you think we can at least get some rain out of it if it goes to LA?
We might get some rain if it goes in west of 92 or so. Any further east and we probably won't see much. The models probably will continue to shift west some...but once it nears the GOM...I think they will be tightly clustered into cntl-E LA.
0 likes
Air Force Met wrote:Roxy wrote:AIRFORCEMET:
are these models going to keep shifting west, or is the shifting done? I know you may not know...but dear lord, everytime they run it's west, west, west!!
What's the deal.?
And you think we can at least get some rain out of it if it goes to LA?
We might get some rain if it goes in west of 92 or so. Any further east and we probably won't see much. The models probably will continue to shift west some...but once it nears the GOM...I think they will be tightly clustered into cntl-E LA.
So I'm rooting for a hit around 92.5 w. That gives us rain and spares NOLA.
0 likes
-
gkrangers
-
Air Force Met
- Military Met

- Posts: 4372
- Age: 56
- Joined: Tue Jul 08, 2003 9:30 am
- Location: Roan Mountain, TN
-
gkrangers
- x-y-no
- Category 5

- Posts: 8359
- Age: 65
- Joined: Wed Aug 11, 2004 12:14 pm
- Location: Fort Lauderdale, FL
Air Force Met wrote:x-y-no wrote:Hurricane by the 2pm intermediate advisory.
Not sure about that...the inner core looks a little ragged.
Yeah ... he doesn't look any better, and maybe a little bit worse, than he did a few hours ago. They'll probably wait for recon to get in there before upgrading at this point.
Jan
0 likes
- cycloneye
- Admin

- Posts: 148503
- Age: 69
- Joined: Thu Oct 10, 2002 10:54 am
- Location: San Juan, Puerto Rico
Just go to the last page for the latest and forget the first pages.Anyway when Dennis is classified as a hurricane a new thread about hurricane Dennis will be posted.
0 likes
Visit the Caribbean-Central America Weather Thread where you can find at first post web cams,radars
and observations from Caribbean basin members Click Here
and observations from Caribbean basin members Click Here
Who is online
Users browsing this forum: wwizard and 654 guests


