1900hurricane wrote:The core pressure gradient is so blown out now.
What does it mean? Good or bad for Dorian?
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1900hurricane wrote:The core pressure gradient is so blown out now.
SconnieCane wrote:NDG wrote:Big time beach erosion now going on in FL's east coast, look at the comparison from yesterday morning at the same time during high tides:
https://i.imgur.com/pa6KWCL.jpg
https://i.imgur.com/G6FC4eU.jpg
Is it me or does the roof of that house look a little beat up, too? Of course that could have been done by an earlier system such as Matthew.
sikkar wrote:1900hurricane wrote:The core pressure gradient is so blown out now.
What does it mean? Good or bad for Dorian?
PandaCitrus wrote:Eyewall is showing signs of organization in the last hour on radar and the center is starting to encounter deeper water with higher oceanic heat content. Something to watch.
PandaCitrus wrote:Eyewall is showing signs of organization in the last hour on radar and the center is starting to encounter deeper water with higher oceanic heat content. Something to watch.
sikkar wrote:1900hurricane wrote:The core pressure gradient is so blown out now.
What does it mean? Good or bad for Dorian?
1900hurricane wrote:The core pressure gradient is so blown out now.
drewschmaltz wrote:Raebie wrote:CaneCurious wrote:
Josh has been placed on the Missing Person’s list. I’ve been listening to the Bahamas radio and it’s devastating.
Do you have a link you can share? So much misinformation on Twitter.
The missing person list is an informal list maintained on Google Docs that was born from a Facebook post. It's a great list but the requirements to be put on the list is that anyone in the world can add you. And anyone can check that you were found. So....
tolakram wrote:1900hurricane wrote:The core pressure gradient is so blown out now.
I'm recalling Ike. Big, lumbering, dangerous, and the core never recovered.
wxman57 wrote:Taking a break from advisories. Looks like recon isn't finding any winds higher than about 80 kts now. Definitely on the move. I measure about 6 kts.
chaser1 wrote:tolakram wrote:1900hurricane wrote:The core pressure gradient is so blown out now.
I'm recalling Ike. Big, lumbering, dangerous, and the core never recovered.
I don't really remember but to what extent did increasing upper level shear play a part there? To your point though, I think back to Hurricane David in '79. Actually landfalled up around Ft. Peirce (I think). I was in Kendall at the time and although the storm's approach was from the S.E. and not as close to Miami, you would've been hard pressed to even know there was a T.S. nearby much less a hurricane. That storm gave and took a beating from hitting the D.R. and never quite recovered either (the hurricane with "no western half")
NDG wrote:That didn't take long for the eye to close again. Is on its way back to Cat 3, IMO.
https://i.imgur.com/KSKALd1.gif
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