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Scott_inVA wrote:My panties aren't in a wad...just passing along what's currentcharleston_hugo_veteran wrote:I don't start worrying till I get a hurricane warning!
Amazing comment from anybody who has been through a hurricane.

MWatkins wrote:
hey Scott...
the 18Z GFS looked a littile strange in the 500MB fields with a surprise 500MB low developing in the central atlantic...this may be what has thrown these models to the north so soon.
MW



huricanwatcher wrote:question? ....... NC storms usually hit what latitude and longitude to give us a hint its headed our way?

Scott_inVA wrote:huricanwatcher wrote:question? ....... NC storms usually hit what latitude and longitude to give us a hint its headed our way?
Don't know about just NC, but "the benchmark" I've always understood is 20N|60W (DT and I have a huge argument years ago as his research is based on 25|60)...20|60 is "tighter" and what I've used.
A significant percentage of TCs that pass near but below (SW quad is below, NE quad is above) the benchmark either landfall or come close to the US mainland. TCs well south of 20° with a strong western component (under 290°) usually don't come up the East Coast, but get to the GOM if surviving the Carib.
Helps to have a trof along/west of the Apps if you want a TC coming in on the Carolinas. Maybe others have specifics on NC but that's how I've always used the benchmark.
HIH
Scott


The models were forecasting Frances to stall around 40W then head north and out to sea. Then it was 45W and out to sea, then 50W, etc. All season long, the models have moved deep tropical systems too slowly and too far north. Ivan is likely not being handled well by any of the models either. It'll probably move faster and farther south than indicated by the models. Could well be a GoM threat in 6-7 days. But I think I'll put my money on Florida again.


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