
NORMAN & 92L.
Moderator: S2k Moderators
superfly wrote:Not sure where the broad low is, but there's a fairly large ball of convection right now.
Thunder44 wrote:superfly wrote:Not sure where the broad low is, but there's a fairly large ball of convection right now.
There doesn't seem be an actual low center anymore. All the buoys in the Western GOM are reporting E to SE winds this morning. There just broad area of lower pressure that covers the entire Western GOM. I think this system it going to have tough time getting better organized with Norman getting going again in the Pacific.
704
WHXX01 KWBC 151304
CHGHUR
DISCLAIMER...NUMERICAL MODELS ARE SUBJECT TO LARGE ERRORS.
PLEASE REFER TO TPC/NHC OFFICIAL FORECASTS FOR TROPICAL CYCLONES.
NATIONAL HURRICANE CENTER NORTH ATLANTIC OBJECTIVE AIDS FOR
DISTURBANCE INVEST (AL922006) ON 20061015 1200 UTC
...00 HRS... ...12 HRS... ...24 HRS... ...36 HRS...
061015 1200 061016 0000 061016 1200 061017 0000
LAT LON LAT LON LAT LON LAT LON
BAMD 22.5N 97.8W 25.7N 96.7W 29.5N 93.4W 33.9N 87.6W
BAMM 22.5N 97.8W 25.7N 97.2W 29.6N 94.9W 34.0N 90.6W
A98E 22.5N 97.8W 23.5N 97.7W 25.6N 96.2W 28.7N 93.6W
LBAR 22.5N 97.8W 24.9N 97.2W 27.9N 95.1W 31.3N 91.3W
SHIP 25KTS 32KTS 40KTS 47KTS
DSHP 25KTS 32KTS 33KTS 29KTS
...48 HRS... ...72 HRS... ...96 HRS... ..120 HRS...
061017 1200 061018 1200 061019 1200 061020 1200
LAT LON LAT LON LAT LON LAT LON
BAMD 37.3N 79.4W 36.9N 65.7W 32.3N 59.6W 28.8N 57.8W
BAMM 37.8N 84.4W 41.1N 72.9W 39.8N 61.0W 37.9N 48.8W
A98E 31.4N 89.5W 34.7N 80.4W 35.1N 70.3W 33.4N 61.3W
LBAR 33.9N 86.1W 34.5N 74.7W 32.2N 72.8W 35.2N 73.5W
SHIP 52KTS 49KTS 43KTS 26KTS
DSHP 28KTS 29KTS 27KTS 0KTS
...INITIAL CONDITIONS...
LATCUR = 22.5N LONCUR = 97.8W DIRCUR = 340DEG SPDCUR = 4KT
LATM12 = 21.6N LONM12 = 97.5W DIRM12 = 338DEG SPDM12 = 4KT
LATM24 = 21.0N LONM24 = 97.3W
WNDCUR = 25KT RMAXWD = 90NM WNDM12 = 20KT
CENPRS = 1005MB OUTPRS = 1007MB OUTRAD = 225NM SDEPTH = M
RD34NE = 0NM RD34SE = 0NM RD34SW = 0NM RD34NW = 0NM
$$
KatDaddy wrote:Hey Wxman57 you posted it wont be a wind event but couldn't we still see 30-40MPH winds along the Upper TX Coast?
wxman57 wrote:KatDaddy wrote:Hey Wxman57 you posted it wont be a wind event but couldn't we still see 30-40MPH winds along the Upper TX Coast?
It's unlikely you'll see sustained wind that high, even if this becomes a TS by landfall. A 40-45 mph sustained wind offshore would translate to 25-30 mph over land with gusts to 40-50 mph in thunderstorms.
wxman57 wrote:Thunder44 wrote:superfly wrote:Not sure where the broad low is, but there's a fairly large ball of convection right now.
There doesn't seem be an actual low center anymore. All the buoys in the Western GOM are reporting E to SE winds this morning. There just broad area of lower pressure that covers the entire Western GOM. I think this system it going to have tough time getting better organized with Norman getting going again in the Pacific.
Here's a 12Z surface plot. The low is still east of Tampico and west of all the buoys, thus the ESE-SE wind at all the buoys. Outflow from Norman in the east Pac is inhibiting development now. It has a shot of becoming a TD/TS before it moves inland into TX/LA on Monday, but it will not be a wind event for TX or LA. Regardless of whether it develops a well-defined closed LLC, the main threat is going to be heavy rain inland. Offshore, winds will gust to 50-70 kts regardless of whether it becomes a named system. Will it get named? Well, it should have shown some better signs of an LLC by now, but it still could develop before moving ashore. I've seen such systems develop very quickly in the past - even in wind shear conditions.