GCANE wrote:Looks like recon is starting to see a little drop in pressure now.
Thanks GCANE, I was wondering about this since the BOC buoy is not changing but the winds there are strong.
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GCANE wrote:Looks like recon is starting to see a little drop in pressure now.
wxman57 wrote:ConvergenceZone wrote:Man, this tropical storm that's forecasted might bring some seriously flooding rains...Look how it just crawls between Tuesday and Thursday.... Yikes!!!
Both GFS & EC have strong west wind across the upper TX coast (aloft) Tuesday. Drives the precip well east of the center into Louisiana on Tuesday. See the RH graphic on Levi's page:
https://www.tropicaltidbits.com/analysis/models/gfs/2021091212/gfs_midRH_scus_11.png
underthwx wrote:wxman57 wrote:ConvergenceZone wrote:Man, this tropical storm that's forecasted might bring some seriously flooding rains...Look how it just crawls between Tuesday and Thursday.... Yikes!!!
Both GFS & EC have strong west wind across the upper TX coast (aloft) Tuesday. Drives the precip well east of the center into Louisiana on Tuesday. See the RH graphic on Levi's page:
https://www.tropicaltidbits.com/analysis/models/gfs/2021091212/gfs_midRH_scus_11.png
Which keeps the precipitation manageable for Harris, Brazoria Counties xman?
wxman57 wrote:ConvergenceZone wrote:Man, this tropical storm that's forecasted might bring some seriously flooding rains...Look how it just crawls between Tuesday and Thursday.... Yikes!!!
Both GFS & EC have strong west wind across the upper TX coast (aloft) Tuesday. Drives the precip well east of the center into Louisiana on Tuesday. See the RH graphic on Levi's page:
https://www.tropicaltidbits.com/analysis/models/gfs/2021091212/gfs_midRH_scus_11.png
Texashawk wrote:Wasn’t there a hurricane that hit South Texas a few years ago that was literally eaten and dissipated within a few hours of landfall by the dry air surrounding it? I may be misremembering this; sorry if so. Is that a possibility with Nick?
SoupBone wrote:Texashawk wrote:Wasn’t there a hurricane that hit South Texas a few years ago that was literally eaten and dissipated within a few hours of landfall by the dry air surrounding it? I may be misremembering this; sorry if so. Is that a possibility with Nick?
I don't recall it being a hurricane, but there was a system that basically poofed when it hit the Texas dry air. I don't think that will be the case here, but that dry air will hopefully keep the intensity minimal.
GCANE wrote:Significantly NW where GFS has it.
Portastorm wrote:SoupBone wrote:Texashawk wrote:Wasn’t there a hurricane that hit South Texas a few years ago that was literally eaten and dissipated within a few hours of landfall by the dry air surrounding it? I may be misremembering this; sorry if so. Is that a possibility with Nick?
I don't recall it being a hurricane, but there was a system that basically poofed when it hit the Texas dry air. I don't think that will be the case here, but that dry air will hopefully keep the intensity minimal.
Hurricane Don. 2011.
cheezyWXguy wrote:Portastorm wrote:SoupBone wrote:
I don't recall it being a hurricane, but there was a system that basically poofed when it hit the Texas dry air. I don't think that will be the case here, but that dry air will hopefully keep the intensity minimal.
Hurricane Don. 2011.
Haha, good one
ConvergenceZone wrote:wxman57 wrote:ConvergenceZone wrote:Man, this tropical storm that's forecasted might bring some seriously flooding rains...Look how it just crawls between Tuesday and Thursday.... Yikes!!!
Both GFS & EC have strong west wind across the upper TX coast (aloft) Tuesday. Drives the precip well east of the center into Louisiana on Tuesday. See the RH graphic on Levi's page:
https://www.tropicaltidbits.com/analysis/models/gfs/2021091212/gfs_midRH_scus_11.png
Man, that's not good at allThis means that Poor Louisiana gonna get big rains due to the slow movement of Nicholas...
SoupBone wrote:cheezyWXguy wrote:Portastorm wrote:
Hurricane Don. 2011.
Haha, good one
That's the one! It dropped like only an inch of rain in most spots, very minimal winds. It was so strange watching it dissipate in short order. Texas put a dry air boot on him and threw him out of Texas. I wish Nicholas would meet the same fate, but there are spots in Texas that need rain bad. I hope the dry air does its job, but the parts that need rain get a little taste of it. We don't want 15" in Houston, thank you.
SoupBone wrote:Texashawk wrote:Wasn’t there a hurricane that hit South Texas a few years ago that was literally eaten and dissipated within a few hours of landfall by the dry air surrounding it? I may be misremembering this; sorry if so. Is that a possibility with Nick?
I don't recall it being a hurricane, but there was a system that basically poofed when it hit the Texas dry air. I don't think that will be the case here, but that dry air will hopefully keep the intensity minimal.
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