AJC3 wrote:arp2559 wrote:wxman57 wrote:Has a weak low in southern Gulf on the 18th, moving across south FL and off the Carolinas by the 20th then out to sea. Peaks out at around 1005mb.
Again, the pressure and storm depiction from the GFS can not be viewed as a storms true intensity. It just can not be done. I've never understood why people insist on using GFS model output as storm intensity. If whatever intensity the GFS was showing was the actual intensity of every storm the last 10 years then we've never had anything above a high end category 1 hurricane.
Huh?
All I see here is two long-time, well-respected posters - one of whom is a met who actually forecasts tropical cyclones for a living - discussing what deterministic model output is showing. Nowhere did I see either person state that the forecast output should be used quantitatively.
Taking posters to task, especially one of the more knowledgeable mets around here, and doing so on your 4th post on the forum = not a good precedent to set for yourself.
Apparently, "arp2259" didn't understand that I was simply reporting the fact that the GFS developed a 1005mb low. There was no implication that the GFS-predicted pressure was correct. Of course the GFS cannot predict TC pressures, it's not designed to do so. However, it is possible to compare one run to another to examine relative differences in the forecast (995mb low vs. 1005mb low, for example). Repeated forecasts of a deeper low could be a stronger indication of possible development than forecasts of a weaker low.
Today's 12Z run is once again not very bullish on development late next weekend. Another weak 1005mb low with hardly a closed isobar. It tracks across Cuba/Florida and up the east coast early next week.