ClarCari wrote:I’m personally throwing 97L the towel and paying more attention to this one. Since this wave looks to be following the same southern part of the MDR as TD20, I can see two scenarios.
Either it develops at around the same pace as TD20 did, maybe recurve, maybe become a major, etc.
OR it stays disorganized and weak until it gets closer to the Caribbean or even in the Caribbean.
At the end of the day I don’t see this wave not becoming some type of thing at some point. Big question is when?
Because it is going to come off 4 days later than TD 20 and because I've yet to see any model run having anything remotely as ominous as many runs of various models had for TD 20, I'm currently not nearly as concerned as I was at times when TD 20 was still over W Africa. Remember how scary the outlook for TD 20's wave was when it was over W Africa? At one point, I was thinking it had a 1 in 3 chance of something pretty bad.
Any significant concern for this new TW would have to wait til if/when model consensus ever does much with it. At this point, it would appear that the biggest potential threat from this would be mainly if it remains a wave until just E of the Caribbean and then develops.
With TD 20 now having no more than a 5% chance of ever being a threat, this has a slightly higher chance than TD 20 right now (perhaps 10-15%) given higher uncertainty, it coming off at a low lat, and it being a Nina, but mainly if it doesn't become a TD until past 50W.
I remain more concerned about "ridge over troubled water" homegrown potential next week.