![Image](https://www.tropicaltidbits.com/sat/images/goes16_ir_07L_201909032337.jpg?2342645)
lot of convection, a category 1 is posibble after all, and I start to worry about the landfall intensity and rain amount, maybe much more than we need
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Hypercane_Kyle wrote:Still has ~20 hours over water if the NHC track is to be believed. Plenty of time to become a Cat 1. See Humberto and Lorenzo in 2007 for similar situations.
Hypercane_Kyle wrote:Still has ~20 hours over water if the NHC track is to be believed. Plenty of time to become a Cat 1. See Humberto and Lorenzo in 2007 for similar situations.
Steve wrote:Hypercane_Kyle wrote:Still has ~20 hours over water if the NHC track is to be believed. Plenty of time to become a Cat 1. See Humberto and Lorenzo in 2007 for similar situations.
Tough to see how it could have 20 more hours the way it looks on IR, but I suppose the center is displaced back some from the deepest convection. But yeah, I’d emphasize your point of anything hitting the western land of the basin (Gulf and often Yucatán) more or less perpendicularly almost always tightens up coming in.
Buck wrote:Hypercane_Kyle wrote:Still has ~20 hours over water if the NHC track is to be believed. Plenty of time to become a Cat 1. See Humberto and Lorenzo in 2007 for similar situations.
Humberto and Lorenzo were fascinating to watch spin into angry little fellas so quickly. Gotta watch these dudes with spanish names in the gulf.
Astromanía wrote:The intensity of rain is now bigger and constant than yesterday's tonight, nothing bad right now, actually is so refreshing
HurricaneRyan wrote:It already made landfall?
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