hurricaneCW wrote:When will recon start to depart?
1 1/2 hours or so I think
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hurricaneCW wrote:When will recon start to depart?
ozonepete wrote:Is anyone having problems with the NOAA SSD satellite images and loops? I'm getting server error and can't see any of them...
AJF0602 wrote:Is there any chance Earl could beat out the cold front with either it's speed or the front just simply not moving fast enough? Earl is still moving rather fast.
SUMMARY OF 800 PM AST...0000 UTC...INFORMATION
----------------------------------------------
LOCATION...22.5N 69.1W
ABOUT 125 MI...235 KM ENE OF GRAND TURK ISLAND
ABOUT 835 MI...1545 KM SSE OF CAPE HATTERAS NORTH CAROLINA
MAXIMUM SUSTAINED WINDS...135 MPH...215 KM/HR
PRESENT MOVEMENT...NW OR 315 DEGREES AT 14 MPH...22 KM/HR
MINIMUM CENTRAL PRESSURE...940 MB...27.76 INCHES
SUMMARY OF 500 PM AST...2100 UTC...INFORMATION
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LOCATION...22.0N 68.8W
ABOUT 150 MI...245 KM ENE OF GRAND TURK ISLAND
ABOUT 1000 MI...1605 KM SSE OF CAPE HATTERAS NORTH CAROLINA
MAXIMUM SUSTAINED WINDS...135 MPH...215 KM/HR
PRESENT MOVEMENT...NW OR 305 DEGREES AT 14 MPH...22 KM/HR
MINIMUM CENTRAL PRESSURE...940 MB...27.76 INCHES
hurricaneCW wrote:How ahead Earl is to the north of the forecast track is more important than how far west he gets when it comes to landfall. Like I said, the further north he gets, the closer he'll get to the coast because he'd be moving north ahead of the trough that turns him to the NE. Even at a 315-320 movement, he gradually going to get close to the coast. He's already past 69W, it doesn't take too much of a westerly movement to get between 74-76W.
cpdaman wrote:platic the "turn" is in response to a upper level feature to his W....he is going around it...
i bet you that by tommorow at noon he is heading on a more westerly heading than he is right now....he will be more under the influence of the high pressure tommorrow as right now he is more under the influence of the upper trough to his west...which is sinking SW slowly but surely
hurricaneCW wrote:How ahead Earl is to the north of the forecast track is more important than how far west he gets when it comes to landfall. Like I said, the further north he gets, the closer he'll get to the coast because he'd be moving north ahead of the trough that turns him to the NE. Even at a 315-320 movement, he gradually going to get close to the coast. He's already past 69W, it doesn't take too much of a westerly movement to get between 74-76W.
SouthFloridawx wrote:cpdaman wrote:platic the "turn" is in response to a upper level feature to his W....he is going around it...
i bet you that by tommorow at noon he is heading on a more westerly heading than he is right now....he will be more under the influence of the high pressure tommorrow as right now he is more under the influence of the upper trough to his west...which is sinking SW slowly but surely
ozonepete wrote:hurricaneCW wrote:How ahead Earl is to the north of the forecast track is more important than how far west he gets when it comes to landfall. Like I said, the further north he gets, the closer he'll get to the coast because he'd be moving north ahead of the trough that turns him to the NE. Even at a 315-320 movement, he gradually going to get close to the coast. He's already past 69W, it doesn't take too much of a westerly movement to get between 74-76W.
You are right about that. If it moves on its current heading of 315 degrees and speeds up a little, it WILL get much closer to the coast much faster, and could affect more of the mid-Atlantic from Hatteras north. Any more west-northwest motion now would bring it closer to the coast, even land falling near Hatteras, but soon thereafter the 500mb trough will recurve it away to the northeast more sharply.
Realy, for me, the model output at 11PM is very key right now.
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