robbielyn wrote:NDG wrote:wxman57 wrote:I have it inland near Tampa then northward, passing west of Jacksonville and into Georgia, where it dissipates. May be a comma-shaped storm in the Gulf with all that westerly shear.
Wow, you are going against low odds of a MH making landfall near Tampa, probably around 1 in a 100 chance of happening every year, but it has been so long that your forecast may indeed be correct. Unfortunately this may be the year.
If it’s comma shaped, i doubt it will be a major or a hurricane. We always get a sheared mess in the gulf and gfs, with ian’s llc forming south of track, says ts at landfall appalach 992 mb. this is sept. i’m sure he will go further north and west with time. this is a very fluid situation. euro was not locked as another met said.
The current location of the LLC further south was picked up nicely by both the GFS and Euro on their runs last night.
The UL trough/jet will be well to the north of Ian, it will not be a heavy sheared system, we are only in late September not late October.
