NDG wrote:AutoPenalti wrote:Dry air really did a number on it. This won’t survive past the Islands.
Good to know, can't wait to tell everyone in FL the all clear from you
Never said all clear for Florida either.
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NDG wrote:AutoPenalti wrote:Dry air really did a number on it. This won’t survive past the Islands.
Good to know, can't wait to tell everyone in FL the all clear from you
Weather Dude wrote:Still not seeing any west winds in the most recent recon pass so it looks like it's not quite there yet. Maybe this new burst of convection will help it get there.
Weather Dude wrote:Still not seeing any west winds in the most recent recon pass so it looks like it's not quite there yet. Maybe this new burst of convection will help it get there.
NDG wrote:Weather Dude wrote:Still not seeing any west winds in the most recent recon pass so it looks like it's not quite there yet. Maybe this new burst of convection will help it get there.
They did found very weak west winds before heading back, they didn't sampled the SW quadrant.
NDG wrote:AutoPenalti wrote:AxaltaRacing24 wrote:I mean, really lol. Can anybody name the last named storm the Islands killed entirely?
Ericka
Ericka fell apart before reaching Hispaniola, nice try.
NDG wrote:Weather Dude wrote:Still not seeing any west winds in the most recent recon pass so it looks like it's not quite there yet. Maybe this new burst of convection will help it get there.
They did found very weak west winds before heading back, they didn't sampled the SW quadrant.
gatorcane wrote:NDG wrote:AutoPenalti wrote:Ericka
Ericka fell apart before reaching Hispaniola, nice try.
Not quite![]()
https://www.nhc.noaa.gov/archive/2015/g ... 5NLW.shtml
Later that day, Hurricane Hunter aircraft observations indicated that Erika no
longer had a well-defined center of circulation, and it is estimated that the tropical cyclone
dissipated shortly after 1200 UTC 28 August just south of the eastern tip of Hispaniola. The
remnants of Erika, an area of low pressure, moved across Haiti on 29 August,
Later that day, Hurricane Hunter aircraft observations indicated that Erika no
longer had a well-defined center of circulation, and it is estimated that the tropical cyclone
dissipated shortly after 1200 UTC 28 August just south of the eastern tip of Hispaniola.
artist wrote:744
URNT12 KNHC 110125 CCA
VORTEX DATA MESSAGE AL062021
A. 11/00:40:40Z
B. 17.34 deg N 066.30 deg W
C. 850 mb 1504 m
D. 1009 mb
E. 050 deg 6 kt
F. NA
G. NA
H. 35 kt
I. 006 deg 31 nm 00:31:00Z
J. 115 deg 40 kt
K. 038 deg 66 nm 00:20:00Z
L. 25 kt
M. 274 deg 8 nm 00:43:00Z
N. 043 deg 31 kt
O. 291 deg 77 nm 01:01:00Z
P. 17 C / 1532 m
Q. 19 C / 1526 m
R. 7 C / NA
S. 134 / 8
T. 0.02 / 6.5 nm
U. AF302 0206A SURVEY OB 11 CCA
MAX FL WIND 43 KT 038 / 71 NM 00:19:00Z
MAX FL TEMP 19 C 352 / 8 NM FROM FL CNTR
SteveM wrote:artist wrote:744
Is there a thread or a key somewhere that explains how to read these?
tolakram wrote:This is not the Erika thread! Jeepers.Stay on topic please.
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