NEXRAD wrote:storms in NC wrote:Brent you know better than any one. Once a storm gets stronger it will most of the time (Not all the time)take on a more Northern path. Not a straight North but I do think a WNW then NW to be the pattern here. We don't know what she will do but what she is doing right now. They Did not call for her to be a cat 1 either. But she is or will be soon. So it is just a matter or time and timing to what she is going to do.
A deeper, stronger, storm will experience greater steering influence from the mid and upper levels than a weaker system, and this will be especially true if Hanna maintains such robust convection. The mid and upper level (H50 through H25) steering patterns will maintain a mostly northerly component over the system alla ridging aloft over Florida and the Ern Gulf of Mexico through mid-week. The Atlantic ridge is being held in place, aloft, from the combined influence of Hanna and the Eward moving trough axis well north of the tropical cyclone. The southerly flow around the western axis of the Atlantic ridge will eventually begin to exert a greater influence on the storm, however, not until late Wednesday or Thursday based on the guidance I've reviewed.
The GFS has shifted steadily left with the 06Z and 12Z runs, and the UKMET has kept its left "outlier" track per the 12Z output. I'd expect the 12 and 18Z guidance to shift left with a deeper early-period Hanna.
- Jay
That's just great new for the east Coast of FL

So what you are saying is that a deeper system is likely to track more west (and not poleward) this time, contrary to convection?