ATL: FLORENCE - Models

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Re: ATL: FLORENCE - Models

#3521 Postby EquusStorm » Tue Sep 11, 2018 1:35 pm

Guess it's a good thing that South Carolina has taken evacuations for this pretty seriously given trends
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Re: ATL: FLORENCE - Models

#3522 Postby artist » Tue Sep 11, 2018 1:36 pm

Image

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Re: ATL: FLORENCE - Models

#3523 Postby GTStorm » Tue Sep 11, 2018 1:38 pm

DESTRUCTION5 wrote:12z Euro 120 hrs in Savannah GA....Didnt see that coming.


Apologies for the off-topic response...but you've gotta be kidding me.

what's the Euro picking up on?
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Re: ATL: FLORENCE - Models

#3524 Postby SouthFLTropics » Tue Sep 11, 2018 1:39 pm

Stop the presses...I can't imagine anyone saw this coming. This potentially changes everything and just goes to show that when a system falls into a weak steering environment that it can lead to major ramifications and uncertainties in the track. I can't recall what time the Euro ensembles come out...Anyone have anything on those yet?
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Re: ATL: FLORENCE - Models

#3525 Postby mcheer23 » Tue Sep 11, 2018 1:39 pm

SouthFLTropics wrote:Stop the presses...I can't imagine anyone saw this coming. This potentially changes everything and just goes to show that when a system falls into a weak steering environment that it can lead to major ramifications and uncertainties in the track. I can't recall what time the Euro ensembles come out...Anyone have anything on those yet?



About an hour til those come out
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Re: ATL: FLORENCE - Models

#3526 Postby bamajammer4eva » Tue Sep 11, 2018 1:40 pm

How does the Euro also show what will become 96L travel south THROUGH Helene then come out the other side and turn west? It may be a fluke run all around.

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Re: ATL: FLORENCE - Models

#3527 Postby chaser1 » Tue Sep 11, 2018 1:40 pm

FLeastcoast wrote:
artist wrote:
HurricaneBelle wrote:
We don't know if there's no landfall, the images are 24 hours apart.

Actually, it is run twice a day, so 12 hours, but your point is well taken.



I am in N FL. Could my area come back into play??


Unlikely but possible. If you're around Daytona to Jax, your odds might have increased from 1.4532 % to possibly 6%. It's such a blocky pattern that if the EURO were on to something, there's not a world of difference between a stall and southwest motion toward Savannah and a motion that might drive Florence a but further south. Still, I wouldn't cancel Uncle Barth's 101st Birthday outdoor lunch quite yet though. Now, if the infamous (does it really still even exist?) FSU model, and/or latter GFS, UK, or Canadian models chime in with a stall further offshore before a due west (WSW or SW) drift occurs then you might wanna book some indoor go-cart track for Uncle Barth as a back-up plan :lol:
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Re: ATL: FLORENCE - Models

#3528 Postby Blinhart » Tue Sep 11, 2018 1:43 pm

chaser1 wrote:
FLeastcoast wrote:
artist wrote:Actually, it is run twice a day, so 12 hours, but your point is well taken.



I am in N FL. Could my area come back into play??


Unlikely but possible. If you're around Daytona to Jax, your odds might have increased from 1.4532 % to possibly 6%. It's such a blocky pattern that if the EURO were on to something, there's not a world of difference between a stall and southwest motion toward Savannah and a motion that might drive Florence a but further south. Still, I wouldn't cancel Uncle Barth's 101st Birthday outdoor lunch quite yet though. Now, if the infamous (does it really still even exist?) FSU model, and/or latter GFS, UK, or Canadian models chime in with a stall further offshore before a due west (WSW or SW) drift occurs then you might wanna book some indoor go-cart track for Uncle Barth as a back-up plan :lol:

The FSU computer models do still exist, but only pro meteorologist are allowed to see them.
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Re: ATL: FLORENCE - Models

#3529 Postby chaser1 » Tue Sep 11, 2018 1:43 pm

GTStorm wrote:
DESTRUCTION5 wrote:12z Euro 120 hrs in Savannah GA....Didnt see that coming.


Apologies for the off-topic response...but you've gotta be kidding me.

what's the Euro picking up on?


Someone must've snagged a couple of those extra weather balloons to huff the helium out of 'em - Gulfstream, get back up there!!
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Re: ATL: FLORENCE - Models

#3530 Postby ChucktownStormer » Tue Sep 11, 2018 1:43 pm

supercane4867 wrote:12z EC all the way to Savannah?

Oh, that's just the place I'm evacuating to...


:double:
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Re: ATL: FLORENCE - Models

#3531 Postby WeatherLovingDoc » Tue Sep 11, 2018 1:45 pm

mcheer23 wrote:
SouthFLTropics wrote:Stop the presses...I can't imagine anyone saw this coming. This potentially changes everything and just goes to show that when a system falls into a weak steering environment that it can lead to major ramifications and uncertainties in the track. I can't recall what time the Euro ensembles come out...Anyone have anything on those yet?



About an hour til those come out


https://weather.us/cyclone-tracks/euro/ ... rence.html
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Re: ATL: FLORENCE - Models

#3532 Postby PTPatrick » Tue Sep 11, 2018 1:46 pm

This would’ve a positive development from a surge perspective. If the storm doesn’t fully move onshore in NC the full surge likely wouldn’t come in yet...although it would still be a large surge just east where the center parks for a bit and it wouldn’t go down for a couple days due to continuous onshore fetch. So I guess the trade of it stopping short of landfall would be slightly lower overall level, but probably longer duration surge event. But the surge in SC on that track would be minimal due to prolonged offshore fetch for days.
Last edited by PTPatrick on Tue Sep 11, 2018 1:47 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: ATL: FLORENCE - Models

#3533 Postby SunnyThoughts » Tue Sep 11, 2018 1:46 pm

Unbelievable, usually when we get to 3 days from landfall, there is at least some agreement with all the models. I guess some may say anywhere from NC to GA is "some" agreement, but sheesh. Hopefully this run had a glitch or some sort...but with all the new information being fed into the models with all the high altitude flights, dropsondes, etc...This may turn out to be correct.
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Re: ATL: FLORENCE - Models

#3534 Postby BobHarlem » Tue Sep 11, 2018 1:47 pm

PTPatrick wrote:This would’ve a positive development from a surge perspective. If the storm doesn’t fully move onshore in NC the full surge likely wouldn’t come in yet...although it would still be a large surge just east where the center parks for a bit and it wouldn’t go down for a couple days due to continuous onshore fetch. But the surge in SC on that track would be minimal due to prolonged offshore fetch for days.


If the eye diameter is as big as the HWRF indicates, I'm not so sure about that
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Re: ATL: FLORENCE - Models

#3535 Postby tolakram » Tue Sep 11, 2018 1:48 pm

12Z Euro
Image
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Re: ATL: FLORENCE - Models

#3536 Postby chaser1 » Tue Sep 11, 2018 1:48 pm

EquusStorm wrote:Guess it's a good thing that South Carolina has taken evacuations for this pretty seriously given trends


That model run could bring hurricane force gusts to Virgina, N.C., S.C., & GA. Heck, any further shift and you'd minimally have Gale Warnings for extreme N. Fla. offshore waters too. Be quite interesting to see the ensembles as well as tonight's EURO run
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Re: ATL: FLORENCE - Models

#3537 Postby Ken711 » Tue Sep 11, 2018 1:49 pm

So is the ridging that much stronger inland to the west forcing the SW track this run?
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Re: ATL: FLORENCE - Models

#3538 Postby Raebie » Tue Sep 11, 2018 1:50 pm

EquusStorm wrote:Guess it's a good thing that South Carolina has taken evacuations for this pretty seriously given trends


Yeah, but a lot of the SC folks have evacuated to northern GA.
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Re: ATL: FLORENCE - Models

#3539 Postby northjaxpro » Tue Sep 11, 2018 1:51 pm

Ken711 wrote:So is the ridging that much stronger inland to the west forcing the SW track this run?


Based on the 12Z EURO run, yes!!
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Re: ATL: FLORENCE - Models

#3540 Postby chaser1 » Tue Sep 11, 2018 1:52 pm

BobHarlem wrote:
PTPatrick wrote:This would’ve a positive development from a surge perspective. If the storm doesn’t fully move onshore in NC the full surge likely wouldn’t come in yet...although it would still be a large surge just east where the center parks for a bit and it wouldn’t go down for a couple days due to continuous onshore fetch. But the surge in SC on that track would be minimal due to prolonged offshore fetch for days.


If the eye diameter is as big as the HWRF indicates, I'm not so sure about that


I disagree. On that track and with a very slow motion, I'd thing that there could be a tremendous surge in the northern quad. as the center were to slide southward (especially if timed with the seasonal high tides anticipated later this week)
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