Excuses me while I put my fist through a wall.
Sleep might help.

Moderator: S2k Moderators
Matt-hurricanewatcher wrote:I did not say that this was not going to develop. I was just mad that shear was increasing to the north...Which could easly drop down to this system...In also the convection was being forced to the west again.
Right now there is a very well defined LLC at 12.5/40.2...Nice banding forming with convection mostly over the western side. I say this is a strong depression if not a weak tropical storm 30 to 35 knots. We will see how long the nhc takes to upgrade.
Derek Ortt wrote:what we have is a very disorganized area of low-pressure that is showing no signs of further development and atmospheric conditions do not seem as favorable as expected. Too much easterly shear over it, and ahead, too much westerly shear
As an aside, shouldn't we stop with these season is a dud posts? Anyone remember 1998 and 1999? We had the B storm in mid August
5:59 a.m. ET 8/7/06
M. Newman, Meteorologist, The Weather Channel
A low pressure area in the far eastern Atlantic, about 1400 miles E of the Windward Islands, continues to bear watching. It's showing some signs of organization, and further development is possible over the next day or two as it continues to move westward.
Normandy wrote:Seriously it gets annoying at times...
The disturbance is continuing to get better organized and then all of a sudden people look at a shear map (one that shows a whole 10 KNOTS of increasing shear that not even where the system is) and say..."WELL ITS OVER"
Users browsing this forum: cainjamin, CourierPR, Google Adsense [Bot], HurricaneAndre2008, riapal and 46 guests