wjs3 wrote:Phil:
Well there certaily looks to be a good amount of cyclonic turning with the wave. If that hangs around, the convection will come, I think. Sometimes I think convection (in the East Atlantic, anyway) is overrated, but vorticity is underrated.
http://www.meteo.psu.edu/~gadomski/SAT_ ... m8vis.htmlRight now lots of stratocu, though, Phil. And I only looked at th GFS really quick. There's no one clear wave that it closes off, but you definitely can see suggestions of "something" going on there.
Talk to you later!
WJS3
Yeah, I'm not overly impressed right now. Clearly the dust situation and SSTs are the single biggest impediments, since the other factors are quite positive, including the strong MLAEJ which is clearly keeping the spin going:

The SAL situation is marginal; it could go either way, although the ample mid-level moisture is counterbalancing that problem right now. Since the LLC appears to be higher in latitude than I would have guessed yesterday (I'd say it's about 13.5 degrees north) that makes the SSTs favorable from 20 to 30 west but really marginal between 30 and 40, then favorable again from 40 westward:

That tells me why the models might be currently showing a closed low popping up at 30W and then disappearing a day or two later. It's still worth watching, IMO, but I don't expect to see much change before Monday or Tuesday. BTW, the GFS and other models DO have a closed low, but it's bouncing all over the place in this morning's runs.