Portastorm wrote:Emmett_Brown wrote:I think the biggest enemy of the forecast track would be a prolonged slowdown of some kind. Not saying that this is or is going to happen, but if it did, it obviously could cause shifts downstream. I notice that the trough late in the week shown by the GFS is digging fairly far south on the model, but Ike would be far west at that point. My point being that rate of speed could have bigger downstream affects than wobbles IMO.
Doc Brown, I think that is an excellent point and a slowdown would most certainly -- it seems -- encourage a more northward movement. That being said, there doesn't appear to be any atmospheric parameter that would significantly slow down Ike at all. You have a ridge ... you have a hurricane. Fairly simple.
Actually there is - the next 48 hrs will be key. The shortwave currently over the midwest is expected to weaken the ridge, turn Ike more NW, and slow him down. Depends on how much he slows, how much latitude he gains, and how long it takes the ridge to build back in. Timing is everything.