Ivanhater wrote:I give up on this storm...next!
You can't give up when the game is getting better than ever. When has this system been so close to being upgraded?
Moderator: S2k Moderators
Ivanhater wrote:I give up on this storm...next!
HURAKAN wrote:Ivanhater wrote:I give up on this storm...next!
You can't give up when the game is getting better than ever. When has this system been so close to being upgraded?
Ivanhater wrote:HURAKAN wrote:Ivanhater wrote:I give up on this storm...next!
You can't give up when the game is getting better than ever. When has this system been so close to being upgraded?
Its so frustrating!![]()
HURAKAN wrote:Ivanhater wrote:HURAKAN wrote:
You can't give up when the game is getting better than ever. When has this system been so close to being upgraded?
Its so frustrating!![]()
I have already learned how to cope with it. You can't get frustrating in a waiting game!!!
mgpetre wrote:Good analysis Phil. I posted this earlier, but am putting it out one more time for anyone that hasn't seen NASA's movie of the entire 2005 Hurricane season. If you watch carefully you'll see that there was nothing that persisted like 99L without becoming a storm. This has to be one of the most persistant invests of the satellite age? More a question than a statement.
NASA video of 2005 season (in case you hadn't seen it.) http://learners.gsfc.nasa.gov/mediaviewer/27storms/
PTrackerLA wrote:It looks great on visible satellite this afternoon, LLC or not. I wonder what this will look like when it gets near Jamaica.
x-y-no wrote:Derek Ortt wrote:nice outflow boundary just came out of the clump of storms... should see them decrease fairly quickly
Yeah, cloud tops warming fast except for one little burst on the backside of the disturbance.
skysummit wrote:PTrackerLA wrote:It looks great on visible satellite this afternoon, LLC or not. I wonder what this will look like when it gets near Jamaica.
I say it should begin to look much better. Right now is when it should be having its minimal convection....at least now is the time for the past few days, but today it's holding on to it a little better than before. Like another member mentioned, if it can quickly make it through the narrow area of shear, conditions should improve and he should slow down near Jamaica or a little west.
Then we need to begin watching if there is still a weakness in the Gulf.
TreasureIslandFLGal wrote:Could the introduction of some southwesterly shear actually aid this system? Couldn't it help to get a westerly wind direction included in its overall rotation?
Ed Mahmoud wrote:I'm not a meteorologist, nor do I play one on TV
Bluefields, NI, as a Cat 1 or Cat 2 on Sunday. It won't be called a TC today, but if they fly late enough tomorrow, it'll be TS Dean, unless, of course, it is TS Erin.
Users browsing this forum: Jonny, redingtonbeach and 39 guests