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dwg71 wrote:Convection will be on the decrease, and you will see that its far from Hurricane Dean at the moment.
jschlitz wrote:Instead of focusing so much on how much red shows up in the IR shots look at the organization on the visibles, etc. It's nothing more than a disorganized open wave that blew-up some convection overnight. Until either 1) the convection can persist or 2) a LLC can form - it's nothing to get overly concerned about, esp. with all that shear in front of it.
Sorry for ranting, but I'm just now catching up and I've had to scroll through a dozen pages of calling this a TD or Dean and saying stuff like "if this isn't upgraded the equipment is faulty" at whatnot. It's just getting to the point where one looking for information has to scroll through 5 pages of chat to find one pertinent post.
jschlitz wrote:... Sorry for ranting, but I'm just now catching up and I've had to scroll through a dozen pages of calling this a TD or Dean and saying stuff like "if this isn't upgraded the equipment is faulty" and whatnot. It's just getting to the point where one looking for information has to scroll through 5 pages of chat to find one pertinent post.
fci wrote:HURAKAN wrote::uarrow: We already had Chantal. :
?????
bvigal wrote:Seems I keep posting on an "old" page - sorry! You guys are too fast for my DSL!OK, so I'll ask again - why did they at 9:30am this morning re-issue the Tropical Cyclone Formation Alert? Remember this?
TCFA CRITERIA LIST
SFC GRADIENT
3 A Circulation is evident in the wind field
6 A Circulation has been evident for 24 hours
3 Westerly SFC/Gradient level wind of at least 5 kts, is south of the tropical disturbance and within five degrees of the center.
2 Any wind associated with cloud system center is at least 20 kts
3 Any wind associated with cloud system center is at least 25 kts
4 Any wind associated with cloud system center is at least 30 kts YES
3 24 hour pressure decrease at nearby station (within five degrees) equals 2 MB
4 24 hour pressure decrease at nearby station (within five degrees) equals 3 MB YES
2 Estimated MSLP of disturbance is < 1014 MB
3 Estimated MSLP of disturbance is < 1012 MB
4 Estimated MSLP of disturbance is < 1010 MB YES
500 MB
2 There is evidence of at least a trough
3 There is evidence of a closed circulation
200 MB
2 Longwave or major shortwave trough to the northwest of the tropical disturbance
4 Evidence of an anticyclone over the center of the tropical disturbance. YES
3 200MB wind over cloud system center < 25 kts YES
SST
3 SST 26 C or higher YES
SATELLITE
DATA
3 The tropical disturbance has persisted for at least 24 hours.
4 The tropical disturbance has persisted for at least 48 hours
5 The tropical disturbance has persisted for at least 72 hours YES
3 DVORAK classification of T 1.0 YES
Issue TCFA! DVORAK classification of T 1.5 from all agencies
MISCELLANEOUS
3 Cloud system center is north of 5 degrees latitude. YES
5 Tropical disturbance is within 72 hours of a DOD resource.
2 Cloud system center and satellite fix are consistent in location (within 2 degrees) YES
1 20 knot synoptic reports within convective cloud pattern of disturbance. YES
ADD UP THE POINTS. IF VALUE IS 35 OR GREATER, ISSUE THE TCFA!!!
bvigal wrote:jschlitz wrote:... Sorry for ranting, but I'm just now catching up and I've had to scroll through a dozen pages of calling this a TD or Dean and saying stuff like "if this isn't upgraded the equipment is faulty" and whatnot. It's just getting to the point where one looking for information has to scroll through 5 pages of chat to find one pertinent post.
jschlitz, don't apologize, I feel your pain. I just spent over 90 minutes trying to get an earnest and situational question addressed, and every time I did a post, it was already on an 'old' page, which few seem to read, not that I blame them. I get paid only when I work and produce results, and not when I'm in a forum for my own enjoyment. (i.e. I can't afford this.)
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