ConvergenceZone wrote:Hehe, yea all of this talk of where the storm may or may not go, and for all we know, based on present conditions,
we may not end up with a storm at all.....
I said almost the same way back in the thread.

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ConvergenceZone wrote:Hehe, yea all of this talk of where the storm may or may not go, and for all we know, based on present conditions,
we may not end up with a storm at all.....
MGC wrote:I think the models will continue to shift to the left until a defined low level center forms. Have observed this many times.....MGC
The following post is NOT an official forecast and should not be used as such. It is just the opinion of the poster and may or may not be backed by sound meteorological data. It is NOT endorsed by any professional institution including storm2k.org For Official Information please refer to the NHC and NWS products.
Weatherfreak000 wrote:
Don't post misinformation like that bro, it's VERY much in DOUBT that SFL will get anything more like some bands from this. If it doesn't get tangled up in the islands long enough for ridging to build in, still recurve IMHO.
cycloneye wrote:ConvergenceZone wrote:Hehe, yea all of this talk of where the storm may or may not go, and for all we know, based on present conditions,
we may not end up with a storm at all.....
I said almost the same way back in the thread.If it not develops at all,for sure there will be many studys and papers about all this monsoon proccess that is a very slow one.
After studying the visible loops this morning, it appears the main low level vorticity is centered right on the south coast of Barbados...with the mid-level circulation tilted to the northeast...I anticipate that these competing centers will "meet in the middle" later today. Here is a rough drawing of my idea:
dolebot_Broward_NW wrote:The following post is NOT an official forecast and should not be used as such. It is just the opinion of the poster and may or may not be backed by sound meteorological data. It is NOT endorsed by any professional institution including storm2k.org For Official Information please refer to the NHC and NWS products.Weatherfreak000 wrote:
Don't post misinformation like that bro, it's VERY much in DOUBT that SFL will get anything more like some bands from this. If it doesn't get tangled up in the islands long enough for ridging to build in, still recurve IMHO.
I actually prefer being under the gun at the 4-5 day point. If she doesn't pull together soon - invariably the models will shift west.
wxman57 wrote:Pressure center is displaced SW of the convection, as verified by recon. Maybe 14N/58.3W. Convection does appear to be building closer to the weak LLC. If that happens, then it will become Emily. But it's very disorganized presently.
Frank2 wrote:After studying the visible loops this morning, it appears the main low level vorticity is centered right on the south coast of Barbados...with the mid-level circulation tilted to the northeast...I anticipate that these competing centers will "meet in the middle" later today. Here is a rough drawing of my idea:
When you need a football-play graphic to determine what a disturbance is doing, well, that's usually not a sign of a strong disturbance - when a system takes off it only requires a look of less than 2 seconds to see that it's a developing tropical cyclone...
Frank
rockyman wrote:Frank2 wrote:After studying the visible loops this morning, it appears the main low level vorticity is centered right on the south coast of Barbados...with the mid-level circulation tilted to the northeast...I anticipate that these competing centers will "meet in the middle" later today. Here is a rough drawing of my idea:
When you need a football-play graphic to determine what a disturbance is doing, well, that's usually not a sign of a strong disturbance - when a system takes off it only requires a look of less than 2 seconds to see that it's a developing tropical cyclone...
Frank
Very true! The last time I drew a map similar to this was in August of 2005, near the Bahamas
stormreader wrote:wxman57 wrote:Pressure center is displaced SW of the convection, as verified by recon. Maybe 14N/58.3W. Convection does appear to be building closer to the weak LLC. If that happens, then it will become Emily. But it's very disorganized presently.
I think WXMAN is right about convection building over what does appear to be a llc. I'm a little more optimistic about an upgrade than many of you seem to be this morning. I think we have a small system brewing here just east of the islands. And as wxman notes the pressure center is now a little further SW than originally expected, so I think when the upgrade to cyclone comes (sooner rather than later I think) initialization will be a little further south. We'll see if models react with a somewhat later than expected tug north (and a further west trend) because of the smaller size of the system. Just the opinion of an amateur.
Aric Dunn wrote:MGC wrote:I think the models will continue to shift to the left until a defined low level center forms. Have observed this many times.....MGC
exactly.. because without a defined low that is intensifying its not going to feel the weakness and stay more west. and eventually if it take stoo long will miss the weakness completely and get stuck under the stronger ridge over the gulf and western carrib affecting central america... unless a trough can move the large ridge over the southern us out making another weakness. but no signs thats going to happen
Evil Jeremy wrote:That plot is from last night. Current plot is less recurvy. Eirher way, recurve or not, florida is part of this now.
Aric Dunn wrote:although its the nam... that is not a good track for south florida.. going the straights between cuba.. being over more water less mountains.
http://www.nco.ncep.noaa.gov/pmb/nwprod ... loop.shtml
Evil Jeremy wrote:That plot is from last night. Current plot is less recurvy. Eirher way, recurve or not, florida is part of this now.
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