Blown_away wrote:The 11am advisory had Fay at 11pm tonight at 19.3N 75.4W, so based on that Fay is a little N and W of her 12 hour predicted position from 11am this morning.
Well all that means is she's going faster than predicted.
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Blown_away wrote:The 11am advisory had Fay at 11pm tonight at 19.3N 75.4W, so based on that Fay is a little N and W of her 12 hour predicted position from 11am this morning.
wxman57 wrote:I wouldn't worry too much about the track of a poorly-defined center being a little north or south of the projected track for the next 24 hours. And don't look for any 90 degree turn tomorrow. Expect only a slow gain in latitude the next 24 hours followed by a gradual turn NW tomorrow night and Monday morning. It really makes little difference if Fay is a half degree either side of the forecast track, the turn will come. The only difference it might make is whether the center tracks inland along the western peninsula of FL or just offshore Tue/Wed.
Blown_away wrote:The 11am advisory had Fay at 11pm tonight at 19.3N 75.4W, so based on that Fay is a little N and W of her 12 hour predicted position from 11am this morning.

Dean4Storms wrote:The NHC track, not the cone is pretty much a split down the middle of the model consensus and the NHC usually puts more emphasis on the GFS. Many of the models do come west toward the Panhandle including most all the BAMM models, UKMET, NOGAPS and even some of the others. So yes, if Fay continues more westward than what the NHC track indicates it would be foolish to not give weight to those models in this situation.

Blown_away wrote:The 11am advisory had Fay at 11pm tonight at 19.3N 75.4W, so based on that Fay is a little N and W of her 12 hour predicted position from 11am this morning.
Derek Ortt wrote:wxman57 wrote:I wouldn't worry too much about the track of a poorly-defined center being a little north or south of the projected track for the next 24 hours. And don't look for any 90 degree turn tomorrow. Expect only a slow gain in latitude the next 24 hours followed by a gradual turn NW tomorrow night and Monday morning. It really makes little difference if Fay is a half degree either side of the forecast track, the turn will come. The only difference it might make is whether the center tracks inland along the western peninsula of FL or just offshore Tue/Wed.
Chris,
a half degree may make the difference between being over Cuba or over the Carib. Major implications for intensity

Derek Ortt wrote:wxman57 wrote:I wouldn't worry too much about the track of a poorly-defined center being a little north or south of the projected track for the next 24 hours. And don't look for any 90 degree turn tomorrow. Expect only a slow gain in latitude the next 24 hours followed by a gradual turn NW tomorrow night and Monday morning. It really makes little difference if Fay is a half degree either side of the forecast track, the turn will come. The only difference it might make is whether the center tracks inland along the western peninsula of FL or just offshore Tue/Wed.
wxman57,
a half degree may make the difference between being over Cuba or over the Carib. Major implications for intensity


wxman57 wrote:Dean4Storms wrote:The NHC track, not the cone is pretty much a split down the middle of the model consensus and the NHC usually puts more emphasis on the GFS. Many of the models do come west toward the Panhandle including most all the BAMM models, UKMET, NOGAPS and even some of the others. So yes, if Fay continues more westward than what the NHC track indicates it would be foolish to not give weight to those models in this situation.
Yes, NHC track is in the middle of the better model guidance (consensus models). BAMS (Shallow-BAM for weaker systems) is farthest west (red line on chart below). It's the only model that takes Fay to the FL panhandle, and it really shouldn't be used in the subtropics as it's not dynamical. GFDL (blue line) is farthest east. Note that the GFDL just made a major shift west to be more in line with the rest of guidance.

Jason_B wrote:Actually it is already moving slightly north of west, so a solid wnw movement should take place tomorrow and eventually NW just like the models are showing. No reason for the models to shift any further west than they are right now.

Jason_B wrote:This is not going to hit Pensacola.

Derek Ortt wrote:wxman57 wrote:I wouldn't worry too much about the track of a poorly-defined center being a little north or south of the projected track for the next 24 hours. And don't look for any 90 degree turn tomorrow. Expect only a slow gain in latitude the next 24 hours followed by a gradual turn NW tomorrow night and Monday morning. It really makes little difference if Fay is a half degree either side of the forecast track, the turn will come. The only difference it might make is whether the center tracks inland along the western peninsula of FL or just offshore Tue/Wed.
Chris,
a half degree may make the difference between being over Cuba or over the Carib. Major implications for intensity
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