SoupBone wrote:What the hell happened overnight with the GFS and Euro? How did the Euro become the Eastern outlier?
It's not, really. The Euro ensemble remains, as usual, on the west side of guidance, with a lot of spread, also as usual, so some members are east of the overall consensus. The headline Euro is on the east side. Theoretically the headline run should be equivalent to another run of the ensemble, but only one, and so it can be an extreme one. Most likely, it just happened that the headline run was a very easterly one for the Euro. It's possible that the higher resolution of the headline actually changed the outcome but it seems unlikely with a mature formed storm. It would be a more plausible that the headline is "smarter" if we were dealing with cyclogenesis, because there the increased resolution might help, but we're not.
IMO the ensembles are better guidance than the headlines, partly because of the chance of any single run being an outlier, and partly because it gets your mind off extremely specific tracks so you can make better decisions. Looking at the headline of the GFS plowing down the center of FL might make you think about evacuating from one place to another in the peninsula, but looking at the Euro shows that almost no particular place anywhere in the peninsula is currently either at particularly high or low risk of a strike, and any evacuation decision now should be on site safety (away from the coast and especially the east coast, out of floodplains, wind-hardened buildings, etc.)