#514 Postby aspen » Sun Nov 01, 2020 5:10 pm
The next 18 hours are going to be critical in determining Eta’s future impacts in CA. If, by 6-12z tomorrow morning, Eta is a 970s system within a healthy CDO and pinhole eye starting to pop out, then the HWRF’s solution is likely right. That would mean Eta will bomb out into a major and slow down either right on the coast or just east of it, over water. If Eta is still getting organized by 12z tomorrow, the western model solutions will be correct.
An eastern solution (HWRF) would range from a stronger Mitch to a major that stays off the coast, scraping part of CA but not diving fully inland. A western solution (Euro) will be more like Mitch, with the system rapidly weakening and staying deep within CA as a weak but wet TC. Nearly every outcome is going to be terrible for Nicaragua and Honduras (a Cat 2+ strike is likely in all of them), except for the slim chance that Eta doesn’t make landfall at all.
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I am only a meteorology enthusiast who knows a decent amount about tropical cyclones. Look to the professional mets, the NHC, or your local weather office for the best information.