ATL: LAURA - Post-Tropical - Discussion

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Stormcenter
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Re: ATL: LAURA - Hurricane - Discussion

#4421 Postby Stormcenter » Tue Aug 25, 2020 3:57 pm

Laura right now looks to me like she is headed
for the Lake Charles area.
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Re: ATL: LAURA - Hurricane - Discussion

#4422 Postby HoustonFrog » Tue Aug 25, 2020 3:59 pm

Stormcenter wrote:Laura right now looks to me like she is headed
for the Lake Charles area.


That would be different than every single model. Hope you are right!
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Re: ATL: LAURA - Hurricane - Discussion

#4423 Postby AubreyStorm » Tue Aug 25, 2020 4:01 pm

Kazmit wrote:That massive tower is now obscuring the eye.

https://img.techpowerup.org/200825/ganimrysheb10.jpg


Where do u get this view?
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Re: ATL: LAURA - Hurricane - Discussion

#4424 Postby Hammy » Tue Aug 25, 2020 4:02 pm

AubreyStorm wrote:
Kazmit wrote:That massive tower is now obscuring the eye.

https://img.techpowerup.org/200825/ganimrysheb10.jpg


Where do u get this view?


https://weather.msfc.nasa.gov/GOES/

Click any of the images and (as these zoom) once you do click exactly where you want to view.
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Re: ATL: LAURA - Hurricane - Discussion

#4425 Postby xironman » Tue Aug 25, 2020 4:03 pm

jlauderdal wrote:
wxman57 wrote:No change in NHC track - into Port Arthur around 3am Thursday. I have it about 30 miles west into High Island same time. Would rather the NHC be right.
There you go folks, we are down to less than 50 miles either side of the NHC track, 57 within 30 to the west. if you are chasing it, Galveston to cameron is your spot for now.


That is a bad place to chase, concrete structures, i.e. parking garages are the safest places. Too rural.
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Re: ATL: LAURA - Hurricane - Discussion

#4426 Postby Highteeld » Tue Aug 25, 2020 4:06 pm

Reminds me of Typhoon Kammuri from last year
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Very useful information on the Dvorak Technique --

https://severe.worldweather.wmo.int/TCF ... kBeven.pdf

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Re: ATL: LAURA - Hurricane - Discussion

#4427 Postby jlauderdal » Tue Aug 25, 2020 4:07 pm

xironman wrote:
jlauderdal wrote:
wxman57 wrote:No change in NHC track - into Port Arthur around 3am Thursday. I have it about 30 miles west into High Island same time. Would rather the NHC be right.
There you go folks, we are down to less than 50 miles either side of the NHC track, 57 within 30 to the west. if you are chasing it, Galveston to cameron is your spot for now.


That is a bad place to chase, concrete structures, i.e. parking garages are the safest places. Too rural.
If you are chasing them, you dont always get a cozy place to hangout like a parking garage...good chasers find it and stay alive, natural or manamade structures.
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Re: ATL: LAURA - Hurricane - Discussion

#4428 Postby ConvergenceZone » Tue Aug 25, 2020 4:08 pm

Blow_Hard wrote:I see they have left the LF intensity at 115mph. That's only 35mph more than what it is now. I gotta believe it's going to come in around 130-135mph.
Just my gut feeling...


I think they are getting pretty confident about the strength, Conditions are Good for strengthening, just not perfect, which is why they are probably leveling it off at 115 mph
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Re: ATL: LAURA - Tropical Storm - Discussion

#4429 Postby eastcoastFL » Tue Aug 25, 2020 4:08 pm

Blown Away wrote:
eastcoastFL wrote:
eastcoastFL wrote:Disclaimer **NOT AN OFFICIAL FORECAST **

I'm going to say I think this will be a 130kt storm heading into Port Arthur TX. I hope im wrong and I hope everyone is safe and prepared.

***THIS IS AN AMATEUR OPINION***[/

Looks like my estimated track may pan out. I really hope I’m wrong on intensity. Hopefully there’s unforeseen issues that can put a dent in her.


I think the residential communities are 10-15+ miles inland from the coast, so maybe that allows some of the wind sting to slow a bit


I sure hope so. Nobody wants to take 100kts sustained head on so port Arthur is probably one of the better options if it has to hit somewhere at all. It’s gonna be a scary 48 hours for the folks in that general area and it will probably be wide spread power outages as it rolls east across the country.
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Re: ATL: LAURA - Hurricane - Discussion

#4430 Postby cfisher » Tue Aug 25, 2020 4:11 pm

Average 2mb core drop every hour from now till landfall wouldn't be unreasonable. That would be a 918mb landfall
Last edited by cfisher on Tue Aug 25, 2020 4:12 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: ATL: LAURA - Hurricane - Discussion

#4431 Postby hipshot » Tue Aug 25, 2020 4:11 pm

HurryKane wrote:


“ You should be where you are at that time.” Bless his heart :lol:

That brought a chuckle to my day, sure hope I am where I am or I'm having an out of body experience.
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Re: ATL: LAURA - Hurricane - Discussion

#4432 Postby Steve » Tue Aug 25, 2020 4:11 pm

ConvergenceZone wrote:
Blow_Hard wrote:I see they have left the LF intensity at 115mph. That's only 35mph more than what it is now. I gotta believe it's going to come in around 130-135mph.
Just my gut feeling...


I think they are getting pretty confident about the strength, Conditions are Good for strengthening, just not perfect, which is why they are probably leveling it off at 115 mph


They’ll be fairly close to excellent. But with only 30something hours until landfall, it’s not going to have enough time to drop super low. There are some historical exceptions. I believe someone brought up Wilma yesterday. But even if it drops say another 40mb by landfall, that’s still impressive af. Any more than that is a bonus for the storm.
Last edited by Steve on Tue Aug 25, 2020 4:14 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: ATL: LAURA - Tropical Storm - Discussion

#4433 Postby Nederlander » Tue Aug 25, 2020 4:13 pm

eastcoastFL wrote:
Blown Away wrote:
eastcoastFL wrote:


I think the residential communities are 10-15+ miles inland from the coast, so maybe that allows some of the wind sting to slow a bit


I sure hope so. Nobody wants to take 100kts sustained head on so port Arthur is probably one of the better options if it has to hit somewhere at all. It’s gonna be a scary 48 hours for the folks in that general area and it will probably be wide spread power outages as it rolls east across the country.

SW LA would be far better from a population perspective. Not that I’m wishing it my Cajun neighbors by any means, but falling on the LA side would drastically reduce storm surge threat for 100k or so.
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Re: ATL: LAURA - Hurricane - Discussion

#4434 Postby Blow_Hard » Tue Aug 25, 2020 4:13 pm

ConvergenceZone wrote:
Blow_Hard wrote:I see they have left the LF intensity at 115mph. That's only 35mph more than what it is now. I gotta believe it's going to come in around 130-135mph.
Just my gut feeling...


I think they are getting pretty confident about the strength, Conditions are Good for strengthening, just not perfect, which is why they are probably leveling it off at 115 mph



You're probably right. I just remember how they had Michael at about that intensity at the same time during his evolution and I was thinking I can handle a 115 mph storm. Then they gradually started to increase the intensity gradually until it was apparent he was off the chain and they began to be very liberal in their LF predictions.
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Re: ATL: LAURA - Tropical Storm - Discussion

#4435 Postby Steve » Tue Aug 25, 2020 4:13 pm

eastcoastFL wrote:
Blown Away wrote:
eastcoastFL wrote:


I think the residential communities are 10-15+ miles inland from the coast, so maybe that allows some of the wind sting to slow a bit


I sure hope so. Nobody wants to take 100kts sustained head on so port Arthur is probably one of the better options if it has to hit somewhere at all. It’s gonna be a scary 48 hours for the folks in that general area and it will probably be wide spread power outages as it rolls east across the country.


A lot of them just paid with Harvey and Ike and Rita all in the last 15 years. They could use a break.
Last edited by Steve on Tue Aug 25, 2020 4:31 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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cfisher

Re: ATL: LAURA - Hurricane - Discussion

#4436 Postby cfisher » Tue Aug 25, 2020 4:14 pm

Steve wrote:
ConvergenceZone wrote:
Blow_Hard wrote:I see they have left the LF intensity at 115mph. That's only 35mph more than what it is now. I gotta believe it's going to come in around 130-135mph.
Just my gut feeling...


I think they are getting pretty confident about the strength, Conditions are Good for strengthening, just not perfect, which is why they are probably leveling it off at 115 mph


They’ll be fairly close to excellent. But with only 30something hours until landfall, it’s not going to have enough time to drop super low. There are some historical exceptions. I believe someone brought up Wilma yesterday. But even if it drops say another 40mb by landfall, that’s still impressive af.

Climatologically, a 40mb drop over 36 hours with the environment, core structure and SSTs seems low.
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Re: ATL: LAURA - Hurricane - Discussion

#4437 Postby aspen » Tue Aug 25, 2020 4:14 pm

NOAA plane has taken off from Florida, should arrive at Laura within the hour.
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Re: ATL: LAURA - Hurricane - Discussion

#4438 Postby FLpanhandle91 » Tue Aug 25, 2020 4:15 pm

Image

I believe the X is the center. Thoughts?
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Re: ATL: LAURA - Hurricane - Discussion

#4439 Postby eastcoastFL » Tue Aug 25, 2020 4:16 pm

cfisher wrote:Average 2mb core drop every hour from now till landfall wouldn't be unreasonable. That would be a 918mb landfall


Well the nhc is calling for shear the last 12 hours. They don’t think it will cause weakening but she keep it from intensifying further. That’s best case I guess. Your scenario isn’t far fetched.
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Re: ATL: LAURA - Hurricane - Discussion

#4440 Postby Hurrilurker » Tue Aug 25, 2020 4:16 pm

Last few frames it's looking a lot more symmetrical, pretty soon I expect it to slough off all that junk to the south and an eye should be visible in the next few hours.
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