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SouthDadeFish wrote:NHC gives Richard only a 3% chance of becoming a major...
wxman57 wrote:SouthDadeFish wrote:NHC gives Richard only a 3% chance of becoming a major...
I think that calculation is on the low side. You'd have to understand how they actually calculate the percentage. They take a large number of model runs (perhaps 1000), each with a different possible track, and then count the number of times the models forecast a Cat 3 hurricane. So the models aren't necessarily assuming that Richard will be over water for nearly 72 hrs.
SouthDadeFish wrote:Hot tower in the middle of the CDO? certainly looks that way, from recent visible images.
http://www.ssd.noaa.gov/goes/flt/t1/jsl-l.jpg
I think Rick will reach H even faster than that; that hot tower has been in state of continuous full-blast flare for twelve hours now, and banding is beginning to develop now. IMO rapid-intensification is underway (with all of it being organizational at this point, thus the lack of pressure falls until a good mid-level vortex is established.I think it will very likely be a hurricane within 36 hrs. It's organizing quickly now. Could reach 100-110 kts before landfall. Still has almost 3 days over water with low wind shear.
The center would likely survive a WNW jaunt across the Yucatan; a recurve NE track after that is your classic Hurricane Opel.Interesting southward change in the NHC track, now showing Richard really crossing the YP and diminishing to a depression in the southern Gulf. I guess the high really is going to be strong enough to steer it pretty much westnorthwestward
cycloneye wrote:It looks very good on visible image,but, what is inside is the important thing as recon showed nothing impressive.Lets see if this evenings mission gets more strong winds in the data.
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