Convection should begin to build in that area soon.And by tomorrow morning will likely be looking at a quickly developing TC anywhere along trough

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Aric Dunn wrote:The main surge of moisture and vorticity is just now getting into the SE gulf you can clearly see the circulation north of the western tip of cuba.
Convection should begin to build in that area soon.And by tomorrow morning will likely be looking at a quickly developing TC anywhere along trough
https://i.ibb.co/pnDw1zY/LABELS-19700101-000000-2.gif
SFLcane wrote:Aric Dunn wrote:The main surge of moisture and vorticity is just now getting into the SE gulf you can clearly see the circulation north of the western tip of cuba.
Convection should begin to build in that area soon.And by tomorrow morning will likely be looking at a quickly developing TC anywhere along trough
https://i.ibb.co/pnDw1zY/LABELS-19700101-000000-2.gif
Looks like drier air maybe undercutting the disturbance tonight. HRRR has SFL drying up pretty quickly tomorrow afternoon. We shall see
Slughitter3 wrote:I can't upload the GIF from the computer I am on, but run this loop through and things seem to be spinning off of the Keys. Lots of rain to come.
https://weather.cod.edu/satrad/?parms=local-S_Florida-comp_radar-24-0-100-1&checked=map&colorbar=undefined
SFLcane wrote:Looks like the bulk of this might actually miss the mainland to the east.
That seems to be verifying....getting some 40+ winds but not a ton of precip which is relative recently..anything less than a 2 inch day the last few weeks is considered drySFLcane wrote:Looks like the bulk of this might actually miss the mainland to the east.
You need an LLC and there isnt one, yet.Shell Mound wrote:If storms such as Colin (2016) and Andrea (2019) can get named, I don’t see why this can’t. It’s at least as organised as those two storms were.
Siker wrote:Shear is quite divergent, water is quite warm, moisture is quite moist. Just takes time to build an LLC when all of those factors are focused away (under the MCV) from the former broad low level center (now visible well west of Florida).
northjaxpro wrote:Siker wrote:Shear is quite divergent, water is quite warm, moisture is quite moist. Just takes time to build an LLC when all of those factors are focused away (under the MCV) from the former broad low level center (now visible well west of Florida).
Good analysis!
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