If it develops at an Humberto/Bret/Opel rate, yikes. It could be Hurricane Hermine within 24, and a major within 48. The LLC is so far south and so well-formed already, that there is IMO a high risk of this becoming a significantly larger and more powerful storm than one usually sees with an early-or-late season NNE shot, or a Yucatan-crossing weakening/restrengthening NW-mover. With the extended long-wave trough forecast to develop in the central Plains, this would imply a tropical system moving more or less straight north to Louisiana, give or take a state, entrained in uniform moist flow.KWT wrote:I agree I think its getting there but its not quite there yet, probably does need to upped to 80% chance though, and I see no real reason why it can't become Hermine in the next 36-48hrs.
Unofficial disclaimers, of course.
The window on seeing a perfectly circular and vigorous LLC is closing as deep convection overspreads the system near sunset: http://www.ssd.noaa.gov/goes/flt/t1/flash-vis.html