hurricanehunter69 wrote:Maybe we can think of this wave in the far eastern Atlantic as a snow plow ( dry air/SAL plow). Or...the engine of the 2016 cape verde wave train? also...check out that cyclonic motion in the Gulf? http://www.ssd.noaa.gov/goes/east/tatl/flash-wv.html
That cyclonic motion in the Gulf is due to an upper-level low passing through, and wind analyses suggest there is not a broad cyclonic rotation going on in the Gulf of Mexico near the surface.
I think that wave coming off of Africa is really more of a preliminary SAL plow. Usually it takes several of these sacrificial waves to sop up the tropical Atlantic, so it'll be a gradual transition from dry to wet over the course of a few weeks. The pro mets here also indicate that storm formation will be concentrated westward, so unlike a 2010 where the formative action was out near Africa, it appears cyclogenesis points will be more west. Waves will probably be dormant seedlings until then.