WxGuy1 wrote:I'm surprised that Isaac remains only a tropical storm considering the time it's been over very warm water. I expected disruption and delayed intensification from Cuba and Haiti, but I, and most folks, it seems, expected that the storm would become a hurricane given the very warm water and only light-moderate shear. As I'm sure we all know, we have comparatively less skill forecasting intensity (compared to track). Even if Isaac went through a period of rapid intensification, I think it's quite unlikely it would be any worse than a Cat 2 at landfall. It *could* be worse (Bastardi seems to make sure to mention how it could be worse -- see 960 mb by yesterday or Cat 5 by landfall), but it could also not intensify much further and make landfall as a Cat 1.
Note that the big surge producers tend to (a) be large in size and (b) have come from storm that previously had been Cat 4 or Cat 5. Katrina was only Cat 3 at main landfall IIRC, but it was carrying it's massive surge accumulated from the time it had been a Cat 5. Again, we're not very good with intensity forecasting, so this post gets the usual "caveat emptor" as any other post discussing intensity forecasts.
I don't get it either...I have seen plenty of storms with much worse conditions intensifying. There have been studies that have stated that global warming may actually be a negative factor on hurricanes because of greater shear, but I don't know if I should take that with a grain of salt. The fact that we have not had a major hurricane hit US soil in seven years, and it appears the streak will continue (and my guess is into next year as El Nino starts to rage in September) is quite telling. Anyway, another topic for another time. I do believe it is still intensifying, albeit at a slow rate. And I still think it could make 105-110 at landfall.