
Looking good
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Aric Dunn wrote:plasticup wrote:Blown Away wrote:It looks like Fiona will get left behind and is getting stronger. I'm anxious to see what the models do with Fiona if trapped under the ridge, will they send her west? I'm surprised there is little chatter because it seems Fiona is fighting back!
HWRF looks like a recurve. GFDL seems less sure - at the end of the model period it's still wandering just north of Bermuda. The steering currents are definitely going to be weak though.
expect the models to start showing more stalling, loop or wsw motion solutions. this can be seen because all the previous runs had fiona accelerating right along with Earl but Fiona is slowing down and earl is now moving faster than fiona so the distance between them is increasing and should continue as Fiona will likely continue to slow down. this is a complete opposite outcome from the previous model runs. they will have to adjust for this.
HURAKAN wrote:
Looking good
fci wrote:That is the loop that showed the northern chunk being pulled into Earl yesterday; but the southern part split and has flourished since then.
Aircraft fixes show a motion of about 305/15 during the past several
hours. Track models are in good agreeement on a northwest to
north-northwest motion for a day or two due to Fiona moving around
a subtropical ridge over the central Atlantic Ocean. However...the
guidance starts to become rather divergent after that time...which
appears to be related to the future intensity of Fiona. If the
storm weakens quickly...the low-level circulation will likely get
caught up in southwesterly flow ahead of Earl. However...if Fiona
stays a more coherent vortex...there remains the potential for it
to get trapped by a mid-level subtropical ridge. Given the strong
shear forecast at the end...the NHC forecast leans toward the
faster track scenario at the end of the forecast period and
is close to the previous forecast. However...I do not have a lot of
confidence in the long-term track or intensity forecasts...as the
models have been sturggling with consistency with this storm.
JtSmarts wrote:Interesting Wording from 11:00 Discussion about Future Track/Intensity...[b]sturggling with consistency with this storm.[/b]
expat2carib wrote:fci wrote:That is the loop that showed the northern chunk being pulled into Earl yesterday; but the southern part split and has flourished since then.
Look at the time-stamp on top of the loop.
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