Strong tropical wave near Africa
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- Miami Storm Tracker
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Re: Strong tropical wave near Africa
Good evening,
Yes it is still looking good. I would have thought the cold cloud tops would have cooled after hitting the Atlantic.
If it gets a little better organized it may gain some lattitude, it's wait and see.
Yes it is still looking good. I would have thought the cold cloud tops would have cooled after hitting the Atlantic.
If it gets a little better organized it may gain some lattitude, it's wait and see.
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- Fego
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- cycloneye
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Re: Strong tropical wave near Africa
I want to see 24 more hours and see convection persist to then be more enthusiastic.


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- ConvergenceZone
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Re: Strong tropical wave near Africa
I'm with you on this Luis....I usually jump the gun too quickly on these waves and look like an idiot when the waves are gone 24 hours later.
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- Gustywind
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Re: Strong tropical wave near Africa
ConvergenceZone wrote:I'm with you on this Luis....I usually jump the gun too quickly on these waves and look like an idiot when the waves are gone 24 hours later.





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Re: Strong tropical wave near Africa
One semi-important thing is that the convection has persisted yes, but the wave has also re-fired some convection. That's no guarantee that it won't poof (my bet is still on a poof) but it's a step in the right direction.
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- Ivanhater
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Re: Strong tropical wave near Africa
I will say the GFS has been showing very favorable conditions in the MDR in the mid to long range...
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Re: Strong tropical wave near Africa
2:00 pm TWD says it has a 1006 MB... wait and see.
TROPICAL WAVE IS APPROACHING THE W AFRICA COAST ALONG 15W/16W S
OF 17N. A NORTHERN LOW-LEVEL DRY VORTICITY CENTER IS NEAR THE
NRN EXTEND OF THE WAVE AXIS ANALYZED AS A 1006 MB LOW NEAR
17N15W. SCATTERED MODERATE/ISOLATED STRONG CONVECTION IS FROM
5N-9N BETWEEN 12W-19W.
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Re: Strong tropical wave near Africa
You can forget anything developing in the eastern Atlantic right now.
http://cimss.ssec.wisc.edu/tropic/real- ... split.html
A massive plume of dry air off of Africa all the way into the central Atlantic.
http://cimss.ssec.wisc.edu/tropic/real- ... split.html
A massive plume of dry air off of Africa all the way into the central Atlantic.
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- cycloneye
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Re: Strong tropical wave near Africa
That is a massive sal outbreak.


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- ColdFusion
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Re: Strong tropical wave near Africa
The western Sahel was forcast to be wetter than usual this year thus keeping SAL in check. I wonder if something changed regarding SAL outlooks from earlier in the year.
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Re: Strong tropical wave near Africa
It's not that unusual to see big outbreaks in early July. June is the peak SAL season and it blends into July. Sal tends to really taper off starting the end of July and throughout the first half of August. The Cape Verde Season really gets going around mid August through Early October. The outbreak is probably the result of the ITCZ continuing to trek further north.
As far as July developments go, I would look around the gulf, the Caribbean, off the southeast coast to maybe the central Atlantic (50w and westward) for any development, which is rather typical for July. As far as anomalies go, we're pretty much at near normal levels when it comes to shear and dry air for early July. I highly doubt we'll see a July similar to 2005.
As far as July developments go, I would look around the gulf, the Caribbean, off the southeast coast to maybe the central Atlantic (50w and westward) for any development, which is rather typical for July. As far as anomalies go, we're pretty much at near normal levels when it comes to shear and dry air for early July. I highly doubt we'll see a July similar to 2005.
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Yeah that SAL is normal, there were huge outbreaks even in the biggest CV seasons, Bertha in 2008 was an exception as it found itself inbetween the SAL.
Actually this year probably early July will be the peak because everything is a little surpressed still from the huge winter/spring -ve NAO and it'll probably take the weakening of the QBO signal to allow things to lift off more.
The SAL is just a sign of the ITCZ, every single seaosn in history will have had a big SAL outbreak at some point...its when they happen in late August that it can really hurt a season...
Hurricanecw, I've never been too keen on a huge July, above average but La Nina's aren't well known for active starts ususally...its that meat of the season where they tend to roll off one after another.
Actually this year probably early July will be the peak because everything is a little surpressed still from the huge winter/spring -ve NAO and it'll probably take the weakening of the QBO signal to allow things to lift off more.
The SAL is just a sign of the ITCZ, every single seaosn in history will have had a big SAL outbreak at some point...its when they happen in late August that it can really hurt a season...
Hurricanecw, I've never been too keen on a huge July, above average but La Nina's aren't well known for active starts ususally...its that meat of the season where they tend to roll off one after another.
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The posts in this forum are NOT official forecast 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.org. For official information, please refer to the NHC and NWS products
The posts in this forum are NOT official forecast 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.org. For official information, please refer to the NHC and NWS products
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