Miami Storm Tracker wrote:The whole run is complete already?
No 36 hours is all
Moderator: S2k Moderators
Miami Storm Tracker wrote:The whole run is complete already?
wxman57 wrote:Look way west. The disturbance is around 25-26N and 71-73W this morning. What was observed yesterday was a "hot spot" as the wave interacted with an upper-trof. As is typically the case, the squalls remained stationary as the wave moved on by. The convection decreased as the wave continued moving out of the area. There will be no recon as there's nothing to fly into.
It's easy to find the wave on a wv loop. Here's a static image:
http://wxman57.com/images/4c.JPG
GeneratorPower wrote:wxman57 wrote:Look way west. The disturbance is around 25-26N and 71-73W this morning. What was observed yesterday was a "hot spot" as the wave interacted with an upper-trof. As is typically the case, the squalls remained stationary as the wave moved on by. The convection decreased as the wave continued moving out of the area. There will be no recon as there's nothing to fly into.
It's easy to find the wave on a wv loop. Here's a static image:
http://wxman57.com/images/4c.JPG
Raise your hand if you're surprised like me that there's actually water vapor still present in the Atlantic basin after this SAL outbreak.
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 4 guests