Hurricane Mike wrote:This convection bubbling around the eye reminds me of Michael.
Unfortunately unless my eyes are deceiving me, Ida looks to be quite a bit larger.
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Hurricane Mike wrote:This convection bubbling around the eye reminds me of Michael.
Hurrilurker wrote:When's the next recon? Right now if it's 3 hours, they're going to miss a lot.
kevin wrote:drewschmaltz wrote:Anyone familiar with LA? Forecasted landfall vs Katrina. How is it potentially different (for better or worse)?
Due to the long time that Katrina sustained MH winds its storm surge was pretty much unparalleled with anything else in the history of the Atlantic so it's near-impossible for any other storm to reach those values. However, don't get me wrong when the only storm you can somewhat compare values to is Katrina then you know that something bad is gonna happen. Many areas along the coast will probably see 10 - 15 ft surge. This will probably have stronger LF winds than Katrina.
Hurrilurker wrote:When's the next recon? Right now if it's 3 hours, they're going to miss a lot.
USTropics wrote:Comradez wrote:What's weird is, the eye is looking a little ragged, and yet the cold convection around the eyewall is looking more vicious than ever. Could that just be some overshooting cloudtops from the eyewall obscuring the true eye on infrared satellite?
There are multiple mesovortices rotating within the eyewall's diameter (common feature for intense tropical systems), which creates the illusion the center is ragged or elongated. This is far from the case though, and if we look underneath the upper-levels (i.e., using radar imagery) we can see these mesovortices features. Impressive, even with radar attenuation.
https://i.postimg.cc/WpfBWBmS/radarloop-2.gif
kevin wrote:drewschmaltz wrote:Anyone familiar with LA? Forecasted landfall vs Katrina. How is it potentially different (for better or worse)?
Due to the long time that Katrina sustained MH winds its storm surge was pretty much unparalleled with anything else in the history of the Atlantic so it's near-impossible for any other storm to reach those values. However, don't get me wrong when the only storm you can somewhat compare values to is Katrina then you know that something bad is gonna happen. Many areas along the coast will probably see 10 - 15 ft surge. This will probably have stronger LF winds than Katrina.
drewschmaltz wrote:Anyone familiar with LA? Forecasted landfall vs Katrina. How is it potentially different (for better or worse)?
Yellow Evan wrote:TXNT25 KNES 290632
TCSNTL
A. 09L (IDA)
B. 29/0531Z
C. 27.5N
D. 88.7W
E. ONE/GOES-E
F. T5.5/5.5
G. IR/EIR/SWIR
H. REMARKS...AN EYE EMBEDDED WITHIN LG RESULTS IN AN ENO OF 5.0. FOR AN
EYE THAT IS OW AND SURROUNDED BY B, THE EADJ IS +0.5, RESULTING IN A DT
OF 5.5. THE MET IS 6.0 BASED ON A RAPIDLY DEVELOPING TREND IN APPARENT
INTENSITY OVER THE PAST 24 HOURS. THE PT IS ALSO 6.0. THE FT IS BASED
ON THE DT.
I. ADDL POSITIONS
NIL
...HOSLEY
SAB what.
drewschmaltz wrote:Anyone familiar with LA? Forecasted landfall vs Katrina. How is it potentially different (for better or worse)?
ncskywarn wrote:Hypercane_Kyle wrote:ncskywarn wrote:
I
That equates to about a 138 miles per hour the surface Which the NHC would round off to 140 if they pull the trigger.
No, those are flight level winds. Actual winds look to be around 110-115 knots.
They usually use point 9 as the formula from flight level to surface Which would equate to 119.7 knots=138 mph rounded up to 140
Weather Dude wrote:Recon's on the way I'm thinking they find around 120-125kts/~944mb
Landy wrote:Looks like TEAL73 is turning around... must be having issues which feels much too common with this storm.
When is next recon supposed to depart?
Weather Dude wrote:Recon's on the way I'm thinking they find around 120-125kts/~944mb
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