wxman57 wrote:Big change in 12z GFS. Weak TS north of Jamaica next Sunday afternoon vs. hurricane over south Florida. I like that run better.
What about the flooding disaster in CA!?
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wxman57 wrote:Big change in 12z GFS. Weak TS north of Jamaica next Sunday afternoon vs. hurricane over south Florida. I like that run better.
Ian2401 wrote:Raw T-Value just shot up to 3.7
Aric Dunn wrote:As it appears Eta will be a hurricane days before any of the models show ( likely from the lack of data)
we should see a uptick in models/members not making landfall and just stalling/rotating around then moving north.
Frank2 wrote:Hoping the system will make a quick CA cross-over into the EPAC and prevent Mitch-type flooding. With a 1035 mb high forecast to be centered over the South its hard to imagine it doing anything else. As our pro-met said the 12z GFS is showing a weaker system moving north - my guess after 6 runs the model is basing this more on current data and less on climatology.
Nimbus wrote:12Z HWRF climbs from 15 to 16N while dropping to 936 mb's at 60 hours.
Will the other models follow?
Nimbus wrote:12Z HWRF climbs from 15 to 16N while dropping to 936 mb's at 60 hours.
Will the other models follow?
Shell Mound wrote:Nimbus wrote:12Z HWRF climbs from 15 to 16N while dropping to 936 mb's at 60 hours.
Will the other models follow?
Given current trends, upper-air conditions, and the starkest TCHP/OHC in the basin, this has a non-zero chance to beat the 1932 Cuba hurricane as the strongest November TC in the Atlantic basin on record and rival or exceed Wilma, if not Patricia, as the strongest TC in the Western Hemisphere. If the HWRF solution were to be even remotely close to the outcome, this scenario would certainly be “on the table,” at the very least. Eta would be drifting and/or moving slowly over the western Caribbean, under pristine atmospheric conditions, over the shallowest thermocline in the Atlantic basin, with extremely warm and deep TCHP/OHC. Not to mention the potential for extremely prolific ACE generation...
CyclonicFury wrote:Shell Mound wrote:Nimbus wrote:12Z HWRF climbs from 15 to 16N while dropping to 936 mb's at 60 hours.
Will the other models follow?
Given current trends, upper-air conditions, and the starkest TCHP/OHC in the basin, this has a non-zero chance to beat the 1932 Cuba hurricane as the strongest November TC in the Atlantic basin on record and rival or exceed Wilma, if not Patricia, as the strongest TC in the Western Hemisphere. If the HWRF solution were to be even remotely close to the outcome, this scenario would certainly be “on the table,” at the very least. Eta would be drifting and/or moving slowly over the western Caribbean, under pristine atmospheric conditions, over the shallowest thermocline in the Atlantic basin, with extremely warm and deep TCHP/OHC. Not to mention the potential for extremely prolific ACE generation...
That's extreme.
Shell Mound wrote:Nimbus wrote:12Z HWRF climbs from 15 to 16N while dropping to 936 mb's at 60 hours.
Will the other models follow?
Given current trends, upper-air conditions, and the starkest TCHP/OHC in the basin, this has a non-zero chance to beat the 1932 Cuba hurricane as the strongest November TC in the Atlantic basin on record and rival or exceed Wilma, if not Patricia, as the strongest TC in the Western Hemisphere. If the HWRF solution were to be even remotely close to the outcome, this scenario would certainly be “on the table,” at the very least. Eta would be drifting and/or moving slowly over the western Caribbean, under pristine atmospheric conditions, over the shallowest thermocline in the Atlantic basin, with extremely warm and deep TCHP/OHC. Not to mention the potential for extremely prolific ACE generation...
Shell Mound wrote:Nimbus wrote:12Z HWRF climbs from 15 to 16N while dropping to 936 mb's at 60 hours.
Will the other models follow?
Given current trends, upper-air conditions, and the starkest TCHP/OHC in the basin, this has a non-zero chance to beat the 1932 Cuba hurricane as the strongest November TC in the Atlantic basin on record and rival or exceed Wilma, if not Patricia, as the strongest TC in the Western Hemisphere. If the HWRF solution were to be even remotely close to the outcome, this scenario would certainly be “on the table,” at the very least. Eta would be drifting and/or moving slowly over the western Caribbean, under pristine atmospheric conditions, over the shallowest thermocline in the Atlantic basin, with extremely warm and deep TCHP/OHC. Not to mention the potential for extremely prolific ACE generation...
Shell Mound wrote:CyclonicFury wrote:Shell Mound wrote:Given current trends, upper-air conditions, and the starkest TCHP/OHC in the basin, this has a non-zero chance to beat the 1932 Cuba hurricane as the strongest November TC in the Atlantic basin on record and rival or exceed Wilma, if not Patricia, as the strongest TC in the Western Hemisphere. If the HWRF solution were to be even remotely close to the outcome, this scenario would certainly be “on the table,” at the very least. Eta would be drifting and/or moving slowly over the western Caribbean, under pristine atmospheric conditions, over the shallowest thermocline in the Atlantic basin, with extremely warm and deep TCHP/OHC. Not to mention the potential for extremely prolific ACE generation...
That's extreme.
Yes, it is extreme, but it’s the “ceiling” in this case, however improbable. Everything, to me, indicates that the “ceiling” for Eta is far from typical.
This could be the storm that some of us expected Delta to become, intensity-wise. To my knowledge, I’m often more conservative, but this stands out.
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