#517 Postby LarryWx » Wed Aug 17, 2005 12:27 pm
I now firmly believe that IF ex-TD-10 were to redevelop into a TS+ prior to reaching 70W, it will recurve safely east of the SE US as it gets caught by a surface/upper trough with its SSW winds. I even think that a TD would likely recurve. So, I currently don't see this as much of a threat for the SE US (FL, GA, SC, NC). It is pretty clearcut in my mind: there is, once again, hardly any Bermuda surface high currently in place and one isn't expected to be in place during the next several days at least. These storms tend to have a hard time hitting the SE coast outside of NC with no significant Bermuda surface high. Check historical maps. It makes sense. There's really nothing to steer it westward enough to hit the SE US imho. On top of this, add a trough getting near the east coast around day 5 and it tells me easy recurve well east of the SE US should it develop significantly over the next 2-3 days. If it stays very weak, I suppose it could track to the Gulf.
I really think that the primary system to watch for FL-NC is the one that is expected to emerge off of Africa in about 4 days. It would be more than two weeks away from the US if it were to make it that far. (early Sept.).
Last edited by
LarryWx on Wed Aug 17, 2005 12:55 pm, edited 3 times in total.
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