Steve wrote:This is a copy and paste of a post I put in on the EE Board at sr. It's basically a recap of the most current models I can get (excluding the ECMWF which I haven't looked at yet). The 12Z NAM continues to keep the LA/MS option (and if you check out the 850mb Virtual Temperature, you'll get a pretty good idea on what it's up to). It basically rotates the moisture across the Mississippi Coast and wraps it across SE LA (possible training if the scenario is right). Then it moves the system WNWish as high pressure builds in and the high over Texas now retrogrades. Some discount the NAM/ETA model, but it was effective last week with the SE Texas/SW Louisiana rainfall when none of the globals were clued in. Therefore, with its recent success*, I'm not going to completely discount it. (*One of the pro mets on here was disagreeing with looking to a model that was the proverbial blind squirrel. Well with recent success of that model, this isn't cherry picking some solution from 2003 or whatever).
CMC Closes off a low off the LA/MS Coast and moves it back inland over both (lots of rain for LA/MS/AL/FL)
GFDL (side note from Invest 99L which it takes across Mexico into the EPAC) Closes the low off south of Mobile Bay. Bulk of the rainfall offshore and into the Big Bend area of Florida (east of the system).
GFS06 - Forms it south of LA/MS/AL and keeps it around for a few days. Keeps bulk of the rain offshore.
Navy NOGAPS - Closes off the low in Plaquemines Parish/adjacent coastal waters and moves back inland near AL/FL border. Bulk of rainfall from Boothville over to Panama City.
UKMET06 - South of Mobile Bay, stationary through the run (short run)
NAM12Z - Bulk of rainfall over LA/MS. The NAM basically rotates the rainfall across the MS Coast into South LA and moves the system sort of westward bringing possible training bands in from the east across SE LA.
Steve
Excellent analysis...thank you!