Clips west side (Tiburon Peninsula) of Haiti.

0z was way west, 12z yesterday was east of today's 12z.
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cheezyWXguy wrote:Trying to figure out if the reduction in chances is due to decreased likelihood of development at all, or a higher likelihood that development would occur (should it occur) beyond the 7 day period. Aside from the early-bird icon, I don’t recall much support for formation until this thing is nearing Jamaica. GFS, GEFS, and CMC have been inconsistent for a while now, so I don’t see much of a notable decrease in model support compared to yesterday.
chaser1 wrote:cheezyWXguy wrote:Trying to figure out if the reduction in chances is due to decreased likelihood of development at all, or a higher likelihood that development would occur (should it occur) beyond the 7 day period. Aside from the early-bird icon, I don’t recall much support for formation until this thing is nearing Jamaica. GFS, GEFS, and CMC have been inconsistent for a while now, so I don’t see much of a notable decrease in model support compared to yesterday.
Ubuntwo wrote:12z GFS is back to a quick roll up scenario with vorticity concentrating in a matter of 24-36 hours, although no development just yet. This has to be one of the more difficult-to-forecast wave TCG cases of the past half decade.
Ubuntwo wrote:chaser1 wrote:cheezyWXguy wrote:Trying to figure out if the reduction in chances is due to decreased likelihood of development at all, or a higher likelihood that development would occur (should it occur) beyond the 7 day period. Aside from the early-bird icon, I don’t recall much support for formation until this thing is nearing Jamaica. GFS, GEFS, and CMC have been inconsistent for a while now, so I don’t see much of a notable decrease in model support compared to yesterday.
Generally, the formation odds are driven by ensemble density more than operational models developing/not. EPS yesterday had nearly 70% developing while GEFS was in the 30-40% range, so 50% was a natural compromise. As of the 0z/6z those dropped by about 10% each.
Ubuntwo wrote:12z GFS is back to a quick roll up scenario with vorticity concentrating in a matter of 24-36 hours, although no development just yet. This has to be one of the more difficult-to-forecast wave TCG cases of the past half decade.
chaser1 wrote:Quite the contradiction between 12Z ICON and GFS runs. Unless the EURO suggests increasing near term development, then my guess strongly leans toward an GFS near to midterm genesis outcome.
looks like it will recurve from that spot.SFLcane wrote:12z icon more north heading wnw-nw at the end of the run.
https://i.postimg.cc/vBtKJcnV/bbb.gif
Teban54 wrote:Ubuntwo wrote:12z GFS is back to a quick roll up scenario with vorticity concentrating in a matter of 24-36 hours, although no development just yet. This has to be one of the more difficult-to-forecast wave TCG cases of the past half decade.
And yet, despite a nice concentration of vorticity at 60 hrs compared to the earlier developing runs like 0z and 6z 8/29 (with even better 500mb vorticity)... This run still keeps the wave weak as it enters and traverses through half of the Caribbean. 12z CMC, despite having a much better organized system than GFS entering the Caribbean, is also massively downtrending in intensity within the Caribbean, now showing a TS south of Jamaica instead of a hurricane.
The question is, why? This GFS run (and some other recent runs) seems to move the wave at a faster pace than the early 8/29 runs. Could it be the fast forward speed preventing early organization? Or something else?
Edit: I also think that the Eastern Atlantic situation on recent model runs is just as much of a head-scratcher, as no models made up their mind on which one of the at least two waves they want to develop. It gets less attention probably due to having no land impacts, and the unlikelihood of getting strong as per operational runs.
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