92L Invest,Comments,Sat Pics,Models Thread
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CHRISTY
Boy AccuWX always has to be the Outlier..Saying North FL the up the east Coast...All by Wed....WTF?
Well by day three anything approaching the SE coast should begin to turn more northerly as a cold front and upper trough approach the East coast.
That's what Accuwx is basing their forecast on I'm sure.
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Yes, as I was mentioning last evening, this front is forecast to be the first "strong" cold front of the season (the NWS local discussion over the weekend mentioned it "sweeping southeastward" by late week), so, anything that forms to the east will most likely remain to the east of Florida.
Frank
Frank
Last edited by Frank2 on Mon Oct 03, 2005 9:20 am, edited 1 time in total.
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- Ivanhater
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Frank2 wrote:Yes, as I was mentioning last evening, this front is forecast to be the first "strong" cold front of the season (the NWS local discussion over the weekend mentioned it "sweeping southeastward" by late week), so, anything that forms to the east will most likely remain to the east of Florida.
Frank
not 1 global model shows that...they all bring it in the gulf and loop it
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CHRISTY
- cycloneye
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cinlfla wrote:Is there model runs for 92L yet?
No 12:00z run from the tropical models yet for it as I haven't seen any.
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Christy- Keep in mind the time of year. We are now in October...which means summer is over. This means cold frontal passages become more and more frequent over the ERN U.S. It would be very rare for a tropical system to strike the East coast of Florida this time of year. That's not to say it can't happen, but chances are low.
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CHRISTY
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Anonymous
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WeatherEmperor
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CHRISTY wrote:must models bring 92L into the gulf ,then once tha front comes down it makes the system turn back into florida. opinions!so iam saying southflorida well be in for nasty weather to say the least!
That would be weird if it truly happened that way. A system hits the east coast of florida and then does a loop to turn around and hit the west side of the state.
<RICKY>
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Re: ivanhater's post
Some mention a loop, but, the NWS discussion I read sometime between late Friday and yesterday morning (I forget) mentioned the cold front, as does AccuWeather this morning per the other poster, so, apparently this front is still a viable feature.
The thing to remember is that the weather pattern this late in the season is very, for lack of a better word, "variable", and, it's often very difficult for forecasters to determine movement of a given tropical system with any level of confidence. Hurricane Gordon (1994) was a good example of this - click on
http://weather.unisys.com/hurricane/atl ... /track.gif
to view.
Frank
Some mention a loop, but, the NWS discussion I read sometime between late Friday and yesterday morning (I forget) mentioned the cold front, as does AccuWeather this morning per the other poster, so, apparently this front is still a viable feature.
The thing to remember is that the weather pattern this late in the season is very, for lack of a better word, "variable", and, it's often very difficult for forecasters to determine movement of a given tropical system with any level of confidence. Hurricane Gordon (1994) was a good example of this - click on
http://weather.unisys.com/hurricane/atl ... /track.gif
to view.
Frank
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Anonymous
- cinlfla
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The thing to remember is that the weather pattern this late in the season is very, for lack of a better word, "variable", and, it's often very difficult for forecasters to determine movement of a given tropical system with any level of confidence. Hurricane Gordon (1994) was a good example of this
If I remember right Hurricane Gordon was one confused storm was doing loopde loops.
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- Downdraft
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Sure looks to me like something is trying to get itself together around 23N73W. Hard to say at the moment but it's looking a lot better this morning.
http://www.ssd.noaa.gov/PS/TROP/DATA/RT ... -loop.html
http://www.ssd.noaa.gov/PS/TROP/DATA/RT ... -loop.html
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WeatherEmperor
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