
hmmm
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tolakram wrote:grapealcoholic wrote:They would need to issue Hurricane Watches for NOLA like... tonight
Watches are issued 48 hours in advance of TS force winds. It's Wednesday and this is projected to be near the coast Monday morning.
The 12z run had it stall, the 18z doesn't.HoustonFrog wrote:How can a hurricane speed up by ~42 hours??
IcyTundra wrote:tolakram wrote:grapealcoholic wrote:They would need to issue Hurricane Watches for NOLA like... tonight
Watches are issued 48 hours in advance of TS force winds. It's Wednesday and this is projected to be near the coast Monday morning.
18Z GFS actually has it making landfall 7 PM central time Sunday night compared to 12Z GFS which had it making landfall around 12 PM on Tuesday.
IcyTundra wrote:How much fast would the average forward speed have to be for this to get to SE LA by Sunday night like the 18Z GFS is showing? That would be booking it.
aspen wrote:The GFS went from being one of the slowest solutions to one of the fastest between just two runs. The 18z run only gives 99L 30 hours between Cuba and Louisiana, which would really put a lid on how much it can intensify. I wonder why there’s such a significant speed difference.
grapealcoholic wrote:Ensemble is coming in much farther north as well
Nate was quite the speedster. Though that forward speed didn't stop it from intensifying. I doubt it will for this system either.supercane4867 wrote:aspen wrote:The GFS went from being one of the slowest solutions to one of the fastest between just two runs. The 18z run only gives 99L 30 hours between Cuba and Louisiana, which would really put a lid on how much it can intensify. I wonder why there’s such a significant speed difference.
FWIW, the fastest-moving tropical system ever recorded in the Gulf is Nate 2017 which only took 24 hours to get from Yucatan Channel to the Northern Gulf Coast. I highly doubt any system can replicate such speed in the month of August
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