Will Claudette survive?
Moderator: S2k Moderators
Forum rules
The posts in this forum are NOT official forecasts and should not be used as such. They are just the opinion of the poster and may or may not be backed by sound meteorological data. They are NOT endorsed by any professional institution or STORM2K. For official information, please refer to products from the National Hurricane Center and National Weather Service.
- ALhurricane
- Professional-Met
- Posts: 452
- Joined: Wed Jan 08, 2003 12:46 pm
- Location: Daphne, AL
Will Claudette survive?
Given the latest recon... 1013mb and only 39kt flight level winds, the question now is if Claudette will even survive to make it into the Gulf?
Satellite loops show an unorganized mess with no signs of recovery. Claudette may be on the way out the door.
Satellite loops show an unorganized mess with no signs of recovery. Claudette may be on the way out the door.
0 likes
- ALhurricane
- Professional-Met
- Posts: 452
- Joined: Wed Jan 08, 2003 12:46 pm
- Location: Daphne, AL
- cycloneye
- Admin
- Posts: 145308
- Age: 68
- Joined: Thu Oct 10, 2002 10:54 am
- Location: San Juan, Puerto Rico
Well at least by the 11 PM advisory it will be still a tropical storm but the winds will be down 20 from 70 mph to 50 mph.Looking ay the history of this system it well may survive this bad period for it as it has been attacked once again by the shear.
0 likes
Visit the Caribbean-Central America Weather Thread where you can find at first post web cams,radars
and observations from Caribbean basin members Click Here
and observations from Caribbean basin members Click Here
wrkh99 wrote:Was it Mike Reiter ?
I love WLOX HD 13
Yep, I know alot of people do not like him. BUT.. he was the ONLY one that pinpointed Georges and kept us all out of harms way. The NHC said it was going more west of us and Mike said it wasn't. So we were all prepared in Ocean Springs, Gautier and Pascagoula to be hammered, and we were. If I had listened to the NHC at the time (all of us here) then we would have been in BIG BIG trouble.
0 likes
Claudette is one of the most bizarre tropical storms I've ever seen in my life...and I'm totally bumfuzzled.
At 9 a.m. this morning, I'd have bet money she'd be a 100+ mph hurricane before landfall on the Yucatan peninsula....deepening from 1004 to 988 mb in 10 hours over some of the MOST CONDUCTIVE waters for intensification in the Western Hemisphere -- and now only 12 hours later the "hurricane" (per 76 kt flight level winds and 988 mb) is now barely a depression IMO...and may be dissapated by morning..
A storm that was born where storms usually die now apparently decides to die where storms (i.e.- Allen, Gilbert, Mitch) sometimes become monsters....jeesh!!
Anyone know where that Dyn-O-Mat plane has been flying today???
-------
PW
At 9 a.m. this morning, I'd have bet money she'd be a 100+ mph hurricane before landfall on the Yucatan peninsula....deepening from 1004 to 988 mb in 10 hours over some of the MOST CONDUCTIVE waters for intensification in the Western Hemisphere -- and now only 12 hours later the "hurricane" (per 76 kt flight level winds and 988 mb) is now barely a depression IMO...and may be dissapated by morning..
A storm that was born where storms usually die now apparently decides to die where storms (i.e.- Allen, Gilbert, Mitch) sometimes become monsters....jeesh!!
Anyone know where that Dyn-O-Mat plane has been flying today???

-------
PW
0 likes
- vbhoutex
- Storm2k Executive
- Posts: 29112
- Age: 73
- Joined: Wed Oct 09, 2002 11:31 pm
- Location: Cypress, TX
- Contact:
JetMaxx wrote:Claudette is one of the most bizarre tropical storms I've ever seen in my life...and I'm totally bumfuzzled.
At 9 a.m. this morning, I'd have bet money she'd be a 100+ mph hurricane before landfall on the Yucatan peninsula....deepening from 1004 to 988 mb in 10 hours over some of the MOST CONDUCTIVE waters for intensification in the Western Hemisphere -- and now only 12 hours later the "hurricane" (per 76 kt flight level winds and 988 mb) is now barely a depression IMO...and may be dissapated by morning..
A storm that was born where storms usually die now apparently decides to die where storms (i.e.- Allen, Gilbert, Mitch) sometimes become monsters....jeesh!!
Anyone know where that Dyn-O-Mat plane has been flying today???
-------
PW
ROFLMAO!!!!! YOU HIT THAT ONE ON THE HEAD PERRY!!
Now where is that dang plane? I did see one flying SE out of Houston with something that looked like mats flying out the back!!!




0 likes
Great speculation but this one has been trouble for the start..I say it's not over till the recon gets cancelled. I will continue to watch her!!JetMaxx wrote:Claudette is one of the most bizarre tropical storms I've ever seen in my life...and I'm totally bumfuzzled.
At 9 a.m. this morning, I'd have bet money she'd be a 100+ mph hurricane before landfall on the Yucatan peninsula....deepening from 1004 to 988 mb in 10 hours over some of the MOST CONDUCTIVE waters for intensification in the Western Hemisphere -- and now only 12 hours later the "hurricane" (per 76 kt flight level winds and 988 mb) is now barely a depression IMO...and may be dissapated by morning..
A storm that was born where storms usually die now apparently decides to die where storms (i.e.- Allen, Gilbert, Mitch) sometimes become monsters....jeesh!!
Anyone know where that Dyn-O-Mat plane has been flying today???
-------
PW


0 likes
Anything is possible Tom...but I don't ever recall witnessing a storm go from 988 mb to 1013 mb in 12 hours over the NW Caribbean before -- never...not even in November. If that 1013 mb reading is truly the center -- this storm has been totally shredded. In all honesty, 1013 mb is too high to even call it a TS -- esp. if 39 kts are the strongest flight level winds out there.
Could Claudette come back and re-strengthen? You betcha....especially if she misses the Yucatan and the shear relaxes.
Remember....both Audrey and Opal were only weak depressions in the southern GOM/ Yucatan area -- and became monsters. Nothing is impossible with a tropical system over warm waters.
Perry
Could Claudette come back and re-strengthen? You betcha....especially if she misses the Yucatan and the shear relaxes.
Remember....both Audrey and Opal were only weak depressions in the southern GOM/ Yucatan area -- and became monsters. Nothing is impossible with a tropical system over warm waters.
Perry
Last edited by JetMaxx on Thu Jul 10, 2003 9:05 pm, edited 1 time in total.
0 likes
The convection associated with Claudette has been refiring the last several overnights.
It is easy to think that the 1013 millibar pressure is too high with this system. The NHC and the Hurricane Hunters may be confused with this situation, too.
It is easy to think that the 1013 millibar pressure is too high with this system. The NHC and the Hurricane Hunters may be confused with this situation, too.
Last edited by ColdFront77 on Thu Jul 10, 2003 9:22 pm, edited 1 time in total.
0 likes
This is one tough tropical nutet to crackJetMaxx wrote:Anything is possible Tom...but I recall ever witnessing a storm go from 988 mb to 1013 mb in 12 hours over the NW Caribbean before -- never...not even in November. If that 1013 mb reading is truly the center -- this storm has been totally shredded. In all honesty, 1013 mb is too high to even call it a TS -- esp. if 39 kts are the strongest flight level winds out there.
Could Claudette come back and re-strengthen? You betcha....especially if she misses the Yucatan and the shear relaxes.
Remember....both Audrey and Opal were only weak depressions in the southern GOM/ Yucatan area -- and became monsters. Nothing is impossible with a tropical system over warm waters.
Perry


0 likes
- Stormsfury
- Category 5
- Posts: 10549
- Age: 53
- Joined: Wed Feb 05, 2003 6:27 pm
- Location: Summerville, SC
Remember ... Claudette has had such a small circulation that rapid changes will be experienced at any slight changes that disrupt or aid Claudette in any way ... and the last 2-3 days I think have proven that ...
Claudette has two main of convection and deep blowups are occurring both west and east of the LLC ... shear is clearly lessening based on the more circular pattern to the upper cloud canopy, and Claudette is slowly becoming a ticking time bomb ready to explode ... and if all factors come in line, the GFDL from last years' too explosive deepening of storms could actually get one right ...
We're entering the nocturnal maxima for the deep convection explosions of tropical systems and since Claudette has seemed to favor the nighttime anyway, I don't see anything changing with that synopsis ... the diurnal minimum has been a nightmare for Claudette ...
Anyway, Claudette is too tenacious of a system to just go away quietly in the night, IMO...
Claudette has two main of convection and deep blowups are occurring both west and east of the LLC ... shear is clearly lessening based on the more circular pattern to the upper cloud canopy, and Claudette is slowly becoming a ticking time bomb ready to explode ... and if all factors come in line, the GFDL from last years' too explosive deepening of storms could actually get one right ...
We're entering the nocturnal maxima for the deep convection explosions of tropical systems and since Claudette has seemed to favor the nighttime anyway, I don't see anything changing with that synopsis ... the diurnal minimum has been a nightmare for Claudette ...
Anyway, Claudette is too tenacious of a system to just go away quietly in the night, IMO...
0 likes
Who is online
Users browsing this forum: cycloneye, HurricaneFan, Hurrilurker, USTropics, WaveBreaking and 46 guests