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Steve wrote:Agreed with that Toad. Not a fan of it either. Maybe we missed one or two systems a year - at most - back then anyway? Whatever the adjustment is, I don’t think it’s consequential. Anyone with actual data or reanalysis estimates is certainly welcome to educate me on that assumption if I’m wrong.
Sam Lillo
@splillo
Another tropical storm, another record.
However, ACE climatology really ramps up entering peak season, and 2020 is not keeping up. Currently ranks 36th, and sits just above average. 2011 and 2012 have pretty similar ACE / TS ratios at this point too.
Hammy wrote:CFS continuing to show 3-5 storms in the MDR during September (backing off a bit some from earlier runs) including a few long trackers in the coming week or two, so along with what appears to be at least one Gulf system mid-month still showing us reaching or being close to the Greek alphabet before October.
Frank2 wrote:Jim Cantore quoting a fellow meteorologist this morning:Sam Lillo
@splillo
Another tropical storm, another record.
However, ACE climatology really ramps up entering peak season, and 2020 is not keeping up. Currently ranks 36th, and sits just above average. 2011 and 2012 have pretty similar ACE / TS ratios at this point too.
IMHO a matter of "quality over quantity" because Laura was the only strong system so far...
Steve wrote:Frank2 wrote:Jim Cantore quoting a fellow meteorologist this morning:Sam Lillo
@splillo
Another tropical storm, another record.
However, ACE climatology really ramps up entering peak season, and 2020 is not keeping up. Currently ranks 36th, and sits just above average. 2011 and 2012 have pretty similar ACE / TS ratios at this point too.
IMHO a matter of "quality over quantity" because Laura was the only strong system so far...
You don't consider a 90mph Category 1 a strong storm? If you're talking majors, we'v e only had 1. We're only supposed to have 2.5 in any given year.
Hammy wrote:Steve wrote:Agreed with that Toad. Not a fan of it either. Maybe we missed one or two systems a year - at most - back then anyway? Whatever the adjustment is, I don’t think it’s consequential. Anyone with actual data or reanalysis estimates is certainly welcome to educate me on that assumption if I’m wrong.
My point on this was that people are reading too much into the ACE being low for the number of storms and that even one or two weaker ones being missed has a substantial impact on that in earlier years.
TheStormExpert wrote:Steve wrote:Frank2 wrote:Jim Cantore quoting a fellow meteorologist this morning:
IMHO a matter of "quality over quantity" because Laura was the only strong system so far...
You don't consider a 90mph Category 1 a strong storm? If you're talking majors, we'v e only had 1. We're only supposed to have 2.5 in any given year.
Strongish. In my opinion it’s been nothing short of a quantity over quality season with Laura, Hanna, and Isaias being the only quality storms around. ACE also tells the story.
Steve wrote:TheStormExpert wrote:Steve wrote:
You don't consider a 90mph Category 1 a strong storm? If you're talking majors, we'v e only had 1. We're only supposed to have 2.5 in any given year.
Strongish. In my opinion it’s been nothing short of a quantity over quality season with Laura, Hanna, and Isaias being the only quality storms around. ACE also tells the story.
Yeah, but chances for anything at all of "quality" really isn't supposed to happen until after August 15th, right? 85% of hurricanes/hurricane activity falls after that date which was just a little over 2 weeks ago. As I've said numerous times, I'm an observer and don't have an agenda on this. So to me, the ACE/storm doesn't really mean anything yet. Rather than looking at it as "quantity over quality", I tend more to look at many of those systems as bonus storms that spun up in spite of most years past where they probably wouldn't have.
Steve wrote:You're right on that. And I'm not sure why this year and certainly Toad's "white elephant" year of 2005 had so many systems form outside of the MDR. Hammy noted that there are major differences in "source" for storms between the two years. But she also discussed a couple similarities. Another one that stands out to me is the anomalously warmer water across almost the entire Atlantic basin. We had that in 2005 which I think set the overall + record since they've been measuring. I don't have the 2005 map from 8/31 to contrast, but I remember almost the entire ocean was yellow or orange for much of that season.
https://www.ospo.noaa.gov/Products/ocean/sst/anomaly/
Steve wrote:You're right on that. And I'm not sure why this year and certainly Toad's "white elephant" year of 2005 had so many systems form outside of the MDR. Hammy noted that there are major differences in "source" for storms between the two years. But she also discussed a couple similarities. Another one that stands out to me is the anomalously warmer water across almost the entire Atlantic basin. We had that in 2005 which I think set the overall + record since they've been measuring. I don't have the 2005 map from 8/31 to contrast, but I remember almost the entire ocean was yellow or orange for much of that season.
https://www.ospo.noaa.gov/Products/ocean/sst/anomaly/
EquusStorm wrote:Random frontal low NE of Omar says, hey why didn't you invite me to the high latitude lows suddenly developing deep convection and low/mid level swirls party
https://cdn.discordapp.com/attachments/485131981043269632/750807458376581120/74077785.gif
aspen wrote:EquusStorm wrote:Random frontal low NE of Omar says, hey why didn't you invite me to the high latitude lows suddenly developing deep convection and low/mid level swirls party
https://cdn.discordapp.com/attachments/485131981043269632/750807458376581120/74077785.gif
Many of the global models were showing a possible STC ahead of Omar for the last few days. Looks like they were right.
2020 seems insistent on blowing through the name list as quick as possible and having at least one of the Greeks become a Big One this season.
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