99L Invest E of Windwards,Comments,Sat Pics,Models Thread #2
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Wow this only formed yesterday and the NHC is already talking about this becoming a possible TD.
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- wxmann_91
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vacanechaser wrote:'CaneFreak wrote:What SAL?
dont you know.. thats the catch phrase... everything is shear and sal....
i blame self induced shear .... moving to fast.. lower levels are moving a little slower.... it is in a moist enviornment... not the best... but certainly not dry...
Jesse V. Bass III
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Hurricane Intercept Research Team
Self induced shear too, but look at WV and the SAL analysis from CIMSS. Certainly killing off the northern half. And now, it's either gain latitude and enter the heart of the SAL/dry air, or slam into S. America. JMO of course.
Oh, and BTW, before you get all jumpy about the TWO, it said that conditions are only marginally favorable for a TD.
Last edited by wxmann_91 on Fri Jul 28, 2006 9:28 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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This won't be experiancing much SAL if it can stay at a low latitude until it nears the Caribbean.
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- wxmann_91
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HurricaneHunter914 wrote:This won't be experiancing much SAL if it can stay at a low latitude until it nears the Caribbean.
If it stays at a low latitude it will be finished off in S. America. Now that is unlikely, IMO it will definitely gain latitude, which will allow it to enter the SAL. And remember SAL's are often coincident with strong easterly surges which means 99L isn't slowing its forward speed anytime soon, and the self-induced shear isn't really going to abate.
Another sign of the SAL is the E-W elongated nature of the storm. It's pretty much missing its northern half.
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wxmann_91 wrote:vacanechaser wrote:'CaneFreak wrote:What SAL?
dont you know.. thats the catch phrase... everything is shear and sal....
i blame self induced shear .... moving to fast.. lower levels are moving a little slower.... it is in a moist enviornment... not the best... but certainly not dry...
Jesse V. Bass III
http://www.vastormphoto.com
Hurricane Intercept Research Team
Self induced shear too, but look at WV and the SAL analysis from CIMSS. Certainly killing off the northern half. And now, it's either gain latitude and enter the heart of the SAL/dry air, or slam into S. America. JMO of course.
Oh, and BTW, before you get all jumpy about the TWO, it said that conditions are only marginally favorable for a TD.
What they said was that this could become a TD over the next day or two.
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as per my ametuer eyes even in the nighttime vis loop the low whether its mid or low is becoming more pronounced and seperated from the convection off to its southwest.The blob at 9N and 43W is showing signs of breaking away and moving WNW instead of due west and this may be the start of it becoming its own free system.Its sustaining convection and looking decent tonight.Its not the deepest cluster of storms but its a start.Lets just see if this piece of energy seperates and becomes the new face of 99L
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- brunota2003
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- Extremeweatherguy
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I think it was the right move for the NHC to say this in the TWO. I agree fully with them, and feel that this WILL be a TD within 48 hours if it survives the shear/dry air. From there I think it is a Gulf issue if it moves quickly (which it is doing) and an east coast issue if it slows down some (weakness in ridge).
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- Evil Jeremy
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brunota2003 wrote:Yesterday? its been around alot longer than yesterday...HurricaneHunter914 wrote:Wow this only formed yesterday and the NHC is already talking about this becoming a possible TD.
What I meant was that this became an Invest yesterday and now this is already being considered for being a possible TD.
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