OuterBanker wrote:Is it time for Bones to make the call?
Wxman, how bout it?
No bones about it..........yet
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OuterBanker wrote:Is it time for Bones to make the call?
Wxman, how bout it?
AtlanticWind wrote:OuterBanker wrote:Is it time for Bones to make the call?
Wxman, how bout it?
No bones about it..........yet
Emmett_Brown wrote:AtlanticWind wrote:OuterBanker wrote:Is it time for Bones to make the call?
Wxman, how bout it?
No bones about it..........yet
Agreed. This is as boneless as a chicken nugget in a toddlers happy meal. Too much energy still left in this one...
otowntiger wrote:. And by the way all this talk is moot because 92l will be a struggling open wave most of its life.otowntiger wrote:granted it was an anamously busy 10-15 years in Florida for cat fours, if in fact they were all truly 4's, but still only one cat 5 every 50 years is pretty uncommon.Bocadude85 wrote:
Go through South Florida hurricane history and look at what happened from the 1920's to about 1950. MULTIPLE Cat 4 landfalls and a cat 5 landfall..this year or 10 years from now we could go into another active landfall cycle, it's happened before and will happen again.
I was referring to the talk within this 92l thread for comparing the situation to Andrew- in my opinion and from what I recall the two environmental set ups aren't at all the same. There will be no cat 4 or 5 coming out of 92l, or anything remotely close.Bocadude85 wrote:otowntiger wrote:. And by the way all this talk is moot because 92l will be a struggling open wave most of its life.otowntiger wrote: granted it was an anamously busy 10-15 years in Florida for cat fours, if in fact they were all truly 4's, but still only one cat 5 every 50 years is pretty uncommon.
Why would it be moot? 92L has nothing to do with past hurricane history. The point of the conversation was that we could enter a active landfall cycle at anytime like we did in the 1920's, and when we do those major hurricane landfalls won't seem as rare.
I shouldn't say it, because it could prove me wrong, but sure looks like it's about to dissipate. and that'll be a good thing based on its current projected path.psyclone wrote:92L looks terrible....heavily damaged by shear. But it's still worth checking in on everyday just to see if anything's changed.
OuterBanker wrote:Is it time for Bones to make the call?
Wxman, how bout it?
otowntiger wrote:I shouldn't say it, because it could prove me wrong, but sure looks like it's about to dissipate. and that'll be a good thing based on its current projected path.psyclone wrote:92L looks terrible....heavily damaged by shear. But it's still worth checking in on everyday just to see if anything's changed.
SootyTern wrote:I see the slightly SW movement of the ULL, too. It is closing in on 92L, but no longer appears to be heading south right towards it. What is the position of the ULL with regards to 92L that we have to watch out for in terms of intensification?
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