Ken711 wrote:I think DC could receive a direct hit if the track keeps moving South.
See my post above. The track isn't moving south, it's an interpolation issue between the 48hr and 72hr point. Won't be a straight line between those two points.
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Ken711 wrote:I think DC could receive a direct hit if the track keeps moving South.
Ken711 wrote:I think DC could receive a direct hit if the track keeps moving South.
ROCK wrote:Ken711 wrote:I think DC could receive a direct hit if the track keeps moving South.
your typical bouncing around with the models...The HWRF 06Z has this north of the GFDL into NYC.....the 06Z GFS right into NYC...
Frank2 wrote:Forgive me for the hotlink (it's WV, anyway), but what do the Pro Mets see in this loop - to my eye the negatively-tilted trough might not be as negatively-tilted right now as some had believed it would be:
http://www.ssd.noaa.gov/goes/comp/ceus/flash-wv.html
P.S. I'd be interested to read their thoughts on this - perhaps that's one reason I've not been completely convinced that Sandy will do what they believe it will do - too many variables can change the outcome, despite model advances...
Frank
so Frank...let me get this straight you are totally against every model guidance we currently have at our disposal?
Frank2 wrote:Forgive me for the hotlink (it's WV, anyway), but what do the Pro Mets see in this loop - to my eye the negatively-tilted trough might not be as negatively-tilted right now as some had believed it would be:
http://www.ssd.noaa.gov/goes/comp/ceus/flash-wv.html
P.S. I'd be interested to read their thoughts on this - perhaps that's one reason I've not been completely convinced that Sandy will do what they believe it will do - too many variables can change the outcome, despite model advances...
Frank
Frank2 wrote:so Frank...let me get this straight you are totally against every model guidance we currently have at our disposal?
Didn't say that - just not completely convinced, and haven't been all week...
The thing is - the left turn was promoted since 72 hours ago, and that means 144 hours total lapse time - as we know, model runs beyond 96 hours usually are not very accurate, or at the least the outcome changes from run to run...
That's my argument and perhaps that's why some comments this morning that one model said this and now says that - too many variables in such a complex situation - definitely not as easy as forecasting a westward moving hurricane in the tropics that is apporaching a trough - that's pretty easy forecasting...
Frank
Frank2 wrote:Yes, but if the trough remains more neutral then that'll change everything - me thinks that some at the NHC are beginning to wonder...
wxman57 wrote:This part of the discussion is interesting:
NOTE THAT WIND HAZARDS FOR SANDY NORTH OF THE TROPICAL STORM WARNING
AREA ARE BEING HANDLED BY HIGH WIND...STORM...AND GALE WATCHES AND
WARNINGS ISSUED BY LOCAL NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE OFFICES. GALE
CONDITIONS ARE LIKELY TO FIRST REACH THE MID-ATLANTIC COAST BY LATE
SUNDAY.
So no TS or hurricane warnings for the northeast U.S. I agree it won't be tropical, but people don't understand that a gale warning can mean very strong winds. I have some clients that keep asking "is it going to be a hurricane? We only take actions for hurricanes!". I say, no, it isn't going to be a hurricane, but it will have hurricane-force winds covering a larger area than some hurricanes.
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