AHS2011 wrote:5 looks a little sheared on the northern part, or is it just me?
Maybe a little, only now that you mention it, but it should lighten over the next 12 hours.
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AHS2011 wrote:5 looks a little sheared on the northern part, or is it just me?
IreneSurvivor47 wrote:Who thinks this has near 0% chance to be a new England storm?
IreneSurvivor47 wrote:AHS2011 wrote:5 looks a little sheared on the northern part, or is it just me?
Maybe a little, only now that you mention it, but it should lighten over the next 12 hours.
AHS2011 wrote:IreneSurvivor47 wrote:AHS2011 wrote:5 looks a little sheared on the northern part, or is it just me?
Maybe a little, only now that you mention it, but it should lighten over the next 12 hours.
Do you know an official shear forecast that I could look at?
AHS2011 wrote:IreneSurvivor47 wrote:AHS2011 wrote:5 looks a little sheared on the northern part, or is it just me?
Maybe a little, only now that you mention it, but it should lighten over the next 12 hours.
Do you know an official shear forecast that I could look at?
Hurricane Alexis wrote:So what are the chances it makes a run towards Florida in the next 10 days?
Hurricane Alexis wrote:So what are the chances it makes a run towards Florida in the next 10 days?
RL3AO wrote:The NHC's five day forecasts have average errors of hundreds of miles. To try to guess what may happen in 10 days in the tropics basically is going to cause more harm then good. We could be tracking this for 10 to 14 days. Don't get too far ahead of yourself.
IreneSurvivor47 wrote:Why is the storm forecasted to go west? It looks like it's headed slightly more north than that.
PTrackerLA wrote:This part of the NHC discussion is particularly alarming with the NW movement and weakness in the gulf mentioned. Could be the same weakness returning to the Gulf states that has given us a very wet summer?
THE INITIAL MOTION IS A SOMEWHAT UNCERTAIN 285/16. GLOBAL MODELS
DEPICT A STRONG MID-TROPOSPHERIC ANTICYCLONE TO THE NORTH OF THE
TROPICAL CYCLONE FOR THE NEXT SEVERAL DAYS. THIS STEERING PATTERN
SHOULD CAUSE A WEST-NORTHWESTWARD TO WESTWARD MOTION AT ABOUT THE
SAME SPEED THROUGH MUCH OF THE FORECAST PERIOD. A WEAKNESS OVER
THE GULF OF MEXICO COULD CAUSE SOME SLOWING AND BIT OF A
NORTHWESTWARD TURN LATE IN THE PERIOD. THE COMPUTER MODELS ARE IN
GOOD AGREEMENT...AND THE NHC TRACK FORECAST IS NOT FAR FROM THE
MODEL CONSENSUS.
IreneSurvivor47 wrote:In other words the storm will curve out to sea or be an east coast storm? Sorry, didn't understand that.
IreneSurvivor47 wrote:PTrackerLA wrote:This part of the NHC discussion is particularly alarming with the NW movement and weakness in the gulf mentioned. Could be the same weakness returning to the Gulf states that has given us a very wet summer?
THE INITIAL MOTION IS A SOMEWHAT UNCERTAIN 285/16. GLOBAL MODELS
DEPICT A STRONG MID-TROPOSPHERIC ANTICYCLONE TO THE NORTH OF THE
TROPICAL CYCLONE FOR THE NEXT SEVERAL DAYS. THIS STEERING PATTERN
SHOULD CAUSE A WEST-NORTHWESTWARD TO WESTWARD MOTION AT ABOUT THE
SAME SPEED THROUGH MUCH OF THE FORECAST PERIOD. A WEAKNESS OVER
THE GULF OF MEXICO COULD CAUSE SOME SLOWING AND BIT OF A
NORTHWESTWARD TURN LATE IN THE PERIOD. THE COMPUTER MODELS ARE IN
GOOD AGREEMENT...AND THE NHC TRACK FORECAST IS NOT FAR FROM THE
MODEL CONSENSUS.
In other words the storm will curve out to sea or be an east coast storm? Sorry, didn't understand that.
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