WHOA! Disturbance at 16N/25W.
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- wxman57
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WHOA! Disturbance at 16N/25W.
Just took a glance to see how that disturbance which moved off the west coast of Africa was looking and was quite surprised to see an apparent circulation spanning between 8N and 22N. It has spiral arms! That's a HUGE system. Convection is beginning to develop near the center, which I estimate to be near 16N/25W (give or take). I'm definitely surprised to see how much it has changed since yesterday, and how BIG it is now. This one could be interesting.
Last edited by wxman57 on Wed Aug 20, 2003 6:08 am, edited 4 times in total.
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- wxman57
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Here's the Image
Here's the image. Yellow arrows show the extent of the spiral and the center:
http://home.houston.rr.com/wx/92L.jpg[img][/img]
http://home.houston.rr.com/wx/92L.jpg[img][/img]
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- cycloneye
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It will be a fish system as already being at 16n is too north to move all the way west.Lows at 10-12n are less fish candidates.
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- wxman57
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Timing
It's all in the timing - fish or not. It could track west across the Atlantic between 15N-20N and a ridge could build off the east U.S. coast to block it and shove it west to FL or the Carolinas. Can't rule anything out.
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- mf_dolphin
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rainstorm wrote:too far north already
You make a pretty strong statement with nothing to back-up your position. With high pressure north of it it should maintain a west track for the foreseeable future. The ridge looks to be even further south the more west you go so there's even a possibility of a WSW drift as it moves. Way too early to write off this IMO
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- ameriwx2003
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- wx247
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The convection is nill at the center. It looks good as far as a circ. goes however.
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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.
rainstorm wrote:on the plus side, it is convectionless as usual, so it may continue west for awhile.
I think you just invented a word - convectionless. Cool!

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- stormie_skies
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I'm confused. The string for your globe graphic identifies this as 92L but I thought 92L was further west...??
http://www.nrlmry.navy.mil/tc-bin/tc_home2.cgi?YEAR=2003&MO=Aug&BASIN=ATL&STORM_NAME=92L.INVEST&PROD=track_vis&PHOT=yes&ARCHIVE=active&NAV=tc&DISPLAY=Latest&ACTIVES=03-WPAC-12W.KROVANH,03-WPAC-13W.VAMCO,03-EPAC-90E.INVEST,03-WPAC-90W.INVEST,03-WPAC-91W.INVEST,03-ATL-92L.INVEST,03-CPAC-95C.INVEST,03-EPAC-97E.INVEST,03-WPAC-99W.INVEST,&STYLE=tables
http://www.nrlmry.navy.mil/tc-bin/tc_home2.cgi?YEAR=2003&MO=Aug&BASIN=ATL&STORM_NAME=92L.INVEST&PROD=track_vis&PHOT=yes&ARCHIVE=active&NAV=tc&DISPLAY=Latest&ACTIVES=03-WPAC-12W.KROVANH,03-WPAC-13W.VAMCO,03-EPAC-90E.INVEST,03-WPAC-90W.INVEST,03-WPAC-91W.INVEST,03-ATL-92L.INVEST,03-CPAC-95C.INVEST,03-EPAC-97E.INVEST,03-WPAC-99W.INVEST,&STYLE=tables
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It's FAR too early to know if it will recurve at sea....I remember seeing hurricane David move WSW before resuming a W-WNW course and plowing the Caribbean. The great Florida hurricane of September 1947 also moved WSW from the Cape Verde Islands area.
This is going to be a hurricane season that needs to be monitored very closely. SST's are as warm as I can ever remember....virtually no areas of the Atlantic Basin are below normal (and continues to warm)....areas south and SE of New England 4-6° C currently above normal -- the 26° C isotherm now within 50-100 miles of Nantucket and Martha's Vineyard. This it the type of oceanic heat content enviroment that breeds monsters....like Gilbert and Allen. :o :o
FYI -Here's today's NAVO 26° (79°) SST map. Look how close the pink shading (26-26.5° C) comes to SNE.
http://128.160.23.54/products/MCSST/HPCg26.gif
This is going to be a hurricane season that needs to be monitored very closely. SST's are as warm as I can ever remember....virtually no areas of the Atlantic Basin are below normal (and continues to warm)....areas south and SE of New England 4-6° C currently above normal -- the 26° C isotherm now within 50-100 miles of Nantucket and Martha's Vineyard. This it the type of oceanic heat content enviroment that breeds monsters....like Gilbert and Allen. :o :o
FYI -Here's today's NAVO 26° (79°) SST map. Look how close the pink shading (26-26.5° C) comes to SNE.
http://128.160.23.54/products/MCSST/HPCg26.gif
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- mf_dolphin
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