uhh, that's a wee bit early for a E component.

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jasons2k wrote:cycloneye wrote:Now moving NNE.
Earlier than the models anticipated. Not good.
She’s a monster.
Pipelines182 wrote:MGC wrote:Helene is one of the more impressive tropical storm you will see. Classic satellite presentation. Very little shear if any impacting the cyclone. Once Helene moves clear of the Yucatan it should ramp up quickly. Could peak out as a Cat-4. Lets hope it falls apart before landfall......MGC
not according to the shear map, granted it doesn't look nearly as sheared as this map indicates it should be. It's also supposed to enter an area of high shear just to the north, what's going to cause that shear to drop today?
https://tropic.ssec.wisc.edu/real-time/atlantic/winds/wg8shrZ.GIF
jdjaguar wrote:technikal wrote:USTropics wrote:That was a pretty significant pulse up phase, Helene is well on its way towards establishing an inner core now. From radar and recon data it does look like there might be some faint mid-level dry air entrainment that it's still working through. Latest recon pass is holding pressure steady at about 979mb:
https://i.imgur.com/d16BF18.png
That dry air over the YP that Levi discussed in his video yesterday definitely got partially ingested, and that is probably the only factor has inhibited development so far since the shear went down. Still looking like a beast though.
that dry air is gone. really nothing to hold her back after she clears the tip in the next few hours. friends in Tally are bugging out to Pensacola.
toad strangler wrote:
uhh, that's a wee bit early for a E component.
StPeteMike wrote:
That’s sooner than forecasted, right? Not by much, but I feel like they had a turn to the east starting later in the day.
kevin wrote:Another recon pass by NOAA3 and this might be the one that does it. 978.7 mbar with 7 kt FL winds -> 978 mbar. But more importantly, 78 kt FL winds, which is more than sufficient for an upgrade to 65 kt at the next advisory.
kevin wrote:Another recon pass by NOAA3 and this might be the one that does it. 978.7 mbar with 7 kt FL winds -> 978 mbar. But more importantly, 78 kt FL winds, which is more than sufficient for an upgrade to 65 kt at the next advisory.
Jag95 wrote:toad strangler wrote:
uhh, that's a wee bit early for a E component.
Or a refix on an elliptical center. Radar still looks NNW to me.
3090 wrote:jdjaguar wrote:technikal wrote:
That dry air over the YP that Levi discussed in his video yesterday definitely got partially ingested, and that is probably the only factor has inhibited development so far since the shear went down. Still looking like a beast though.
that dry air is gone. really nothing to hold her back after she clears the tip in the next few hours. friends in Tally are bugging out to Pensacola.
That is FALSE!! The dry air is still feeding into Helene. See the pros statements. And appropriate satellite imagery.
toad strangler wrote:
uhh, that's a wee bit early for a E component.
Beef Stew wrote:Should be getting a hurricane designation at 10:00 CDT. Expecting 65 kts, but there's certainly a case to be made for 70.
wxman57 wrote:I was running SLOSH this morning. A large Cat 3 moving into Apalachee Bay from the south or SSW would produce a 30 ft surge, not 10-15. Forward speed 25 mph at landfall.
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