Scorpion wrote:No, it just needs an LLC. Windspeed is not considered.
wind speeds not condsidered? not considered for what?
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ncdowneast wrote:2 knts are you kiddin me 2 knts is it and this is suppose to be a forming TD? Anyone thinking this is a TD needs to remember there are winds that are required to reach 30mph before it can go TD so let me know when it gains another 28mph!
ncdowneast wrote:2 knts are you kiddin me 2 knts is it and this is suppose to be a forming TD? Anyone thinking this is a TD needs to remember there are winds that are required to reach 30mph before it can go TD so let me know when it gains another 28mph!
x-y-no wrote:ncdowneast wrote:2 knts are you kiddin me 2 knts is it and this is suppose to be a forming TD? Anyone thinking this is a TD needs to remember there are winds that are required to reach 30mph before it can go TD so let me know when it gains another 28mph!
Ummm ... even very powerful TCs will have very light winds in the center.
That said, I'm not particularly excited over a 2 knot NW wind either.
x-y-no wrote:Bouy 41100 - 20:00 GMT
pressure 1011.8mb
wind NW at < 2 knots
Air Force Met wrote:WindRunner wrote:I'm not sounding an alarm or anything, but if you look at the vis loop you might just notice a couple of (barely) eastward moving clouds in the last 5 or so frames (ending at 18:45Z image) that are getting pulled under the new convective flareup over the center. Then again, I might have been staring at that loop too long . . .
No offense...but I'm looking at a better sat loop than the SSD page.![]()
Air Force Met wrote:senorpepr wrote: AFM, it's refreshing to hear people, including mets, refer to the good ol' cusp. Maybe analysts tend to skip over the cusp stage in cyclone development.
Well...I have two things to thank for that:
1) METSAT school...and
2) Tropical Metorology course at Keelser...in which I steamlined my fanny off using satellite imagery and a bunch of charts with a few wind barbs on it.
The CUSP is all important and is the final step before it closes off. Whether it takes the next step is up to it.
Air Force Met wrote:x-y-no wrote:Bouy 41100 - 20:00 GMT
pressure 1011.8mb
wind NW at < 2 knots
I think those are TSTM winds. The vort center, from the GHCC still image, appears to be near 16.1/58.1. The buoy is at 15.9/57.9.
So the buou should have some SE winds right now....but it is under a TSTM and has NW winds...so I think that is most likely what it is...and as we saw earlier...there was no no real veering of the winds as it approached.
ncdowneast wrote:1) There is no low end wind threshold for a TD (now write this on the blackboard 1,000 times...j/k)
is there a chart or scale that shows this as i have always heard that winds have to reach 30mph before it can be classified!?
WindRunner wrote:
Haha . . . I don't doubt it, and would actually be surprised if that's what you were using. But it's (almost) the best available on the internet, and certainly the easiest to access.
And I was trying to contradict you one bit, you showed me the lull on the south side this morning, and I've had the SSD loop up all day waiting for some clouds to turn around and head east . . . and that was the best I had seen yet, sadly . . .
senorpepr wrote:
I went through that same tropical met course at Keesler, and I know you had your share of streamlining in that course. By the end of the day, my hands would be black, blue, and red from the markers plus I would be peppered with eraser shavings.
senorpepr wrote:Air Force Met wrote:senorpepr wrote: AFM, it's refreshing to hear people, including mets, refer to the good ol' cusp. Maybe analysts tend to skip over the cusp stage in cyclone development.
Well...I have two things to thank for that:
1) METSAT school...and
2) Tropical Metorology course at Keelser...in which I steamlined my fanny off using satellite imagery and a bunch of charts with a few wind barbs on it.
The CUSP is all important and is the final step before it closes off. Whether it takes the next step is up to it.
I went through that same tropical met course at Keesler, and I know you had your share of streamlining in that course. By the end of the day, my hands would be black, blue, and red from the markers plus I would be peppered with eraser shavings.
x-y-no wrote:
Yeah - steady ENE winds until this last report.
I'm not arguing with you, AFM!![]()
Interesting to see the pressure down below 1012mb though. I wasn't sure we were going to see that.
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