

Moderator: S2k Moderators
Matt-hurricanewatcher wrote:Matt-hurricanewatcher wrote:Yep just as expected this system has dry air on all sides. The tutt is nosing over the eastern caribbean pushing up a the Anticyclone, which is over this system, with 40 knot shear at 18 north/57 to 62 west. Which you would think would be a faverable outflow jet for this system. With 5 to 10 knot shear over it(LLC) which is faverable enough.
I think dry air is moving into the mid levels(Which is coming from the dry air around the system). Which is killing the convection. Also with the system is moving to fast to the west 15 to 20 mph...Which of course is not helping with closing this off totally. 1# Means convection can't punch through the stable layer(Cape) of dry air(Which keeps convection,thunderstorms form forming). 2# The system stays weak with less rising air then normal with out a totally closed LLC. In the fact that the system is moving fast.
http://cimss.ssec.wisc.edu/tropic/real- ... wg8shr.htm
Understand now?
Opal storm wrote:LOL,it's amazing how quickly you guys write these things off.Just this afternoon some of yall were saying this looked like a TD,and now it's gone poof all of the sudden becuase the convection has died out.Convection dying out and then re-flaring again is very typical in weak disturbances like this. Have some patience and just watch it for the next few days and just see what happens.
I don't think much is going to come out this either but it's June and there's really not much else out there to talk about.
I think wxman57 was saying something about a ridge building in,if that's the case if this develops it will probably take a track like Emily.cheezywxman wrote:I had a feeling thia thing may take a track between dennis and emily last year...and conditions have become too unfavorable for development at this time, but as long as the low stays together, once it gets to the W. Car. it could have time to develop.
MWatkins wrote:There does appear to be just a little bit of convection near what would be the center of the broad low.
Water vapor imagery suggests there is plenty of moisture around:
http://www.ssd.noaa.gov/goes/flt/t2/wv-l.jpg
However, even the GFS does not develop the system and chances are all of the shear is going to keep anything tropical from developing.
But to me...the more significant story is the projected 500MB pattern in 5 days...very zonal with no significant EC trough and the appearance of 594DM heights in the 0Z GFS run:
http://www.nco.ncep.noaa.gov/pmb/nwprod ... 0_120m.gif
And to some extend NOGAPS:
https://www.fnmoc.navy.mil/CGI/PUBLIC/w ... 00&tau=120
And UKMET
http://moe.met.fsu.edu/cgi-bin/ukmtc2.c ... hour=120hr
As a new property owner in SFL I would rather see the mid-level trough axis setting up further east...but hey that is a 5 day forecast.
Going to be watching the EC trough with interest in the coming weeks.
MW
bvigal wrote:Anyone notice this morning's model plots (those models that even intialize this) have bent back to the west?
http://www.sfwmd.gov/org/omd/ops/weathe ... orm_93.gif
cajungal wrote:It looks like it will head to the Gulf Of Mexico. Do you know if conditions in the Gulf will be favorable for development around that time? Bob Breck on channel 8 New Orleans breifly mentioned it last night, but he told us not to worry. That it probably won't develop.