Disturbed Area Over The Yucatan

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Anonymous

#21 Postby Anonymous » Fri Jul 09, 2004 5:07 pm

That ULL off the TX coast appears to be moving outta the way
http://weather.hawaii.edu/satellite/sat ... lat=goes12
Wind shear is not forecasted to become real favorable in the Gomex though for the next 3 days http://www.wunderground.com/data/640x480/atlm_shear.gif
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#22 Postby HURAKAN » Fri Jul 09, 2004 5:15 pm

Today we have only seen an overwhelm quantity of convection developed over the Yucatan Peninsula that is associated to the wave, now if the convection persists over the next 24 hours and moves over water then something may happen, but at this point is not time to get too excited.
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#23 Postby wx247 » Fri Jul 09, 2004 5:21 pm

We are officially on the blob watch now... no matter what happens with this system! :lol:
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Rainband

#24 Postby Rainband » Fri Jul 09, 2004 5:26 pm

Time will tell. NOGAPS has it moving west into Mexico!! :wink:
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ColdFront77

#25 Postby ColdFront77 » Fri Jul 09, 2004 5:26 pm

MortisFL wrote:I doubt it will make it to FL

I am talking about the band moving northeastward, not the convectin itself.....

ColdFront77 wrote:Watching that band moving northeastward toward the Florida peninsula, no matter what it does. :)
Last edited by ColdFront77 on Fri Jul 09, 2004 5:27 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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#26 Postby Steve H. » Fri Jul 09, 2004 5:27 pm

Yeah I'd watch that blob. If the ULL is backing west it could actually ventilate a LLL if one should form. The shape of tht blob would make me a bit nervous if I was in the western GOM states :wink:
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#27 Postby HURAKAN » Fri Jul 09, 2004 5:27 pm

Rainband wrote:Time will tell. NOGAPS has it moving west into Mexico!! :wink:


But the disturbance or a closed low pressure.
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#28 Postby Aquawind » Fri Jul 09, 2004 5:30 pm

HURAKAN wrote:Today we have only seen an overwhelm quantity of convection developed over the Yucatan Peninsula that is associated to the wave, now if the convection persists over the next 24 hours and moves over water then something may happen, but at this point is not time to get too excited.


Well said Sandy 8-) :)

Persistant Deep Convection over water...
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#29 Postby Thunder44 » Fri Jul 09, 2004 5:32 pm

I'm not going to get all excited about this one yet. It's looks good now, but much of it is still over land and the blobs seem to pulse up good and than die down. I suspect it may look "different" tomorrow morning.
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#30 Postby Aquawind » Fri Jul 09, 2004 5:36 pm

Thunder44 wrote:I'm not going to get all excited about this one yet. It's looks good now, but much of it is still over land and the blobs seem to pulse up good and than die down. I suspect it may look "different" tomorrow morning.


Tonight Poof... :lol:

Tomorrow a micro blob.. :roll:
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#31 Postby Derecho » Fri Jul 09, 2004 6:12 pm

This is somewhat similar to the much ballyhoed "INVEST" of some weeks ago, though this has very limited chances of even being an "INVEST."

(What happened back then is a wave was sheared horribly by the SE side of an upper low, but it was divergent shear that caused a lot of convection, but then the ULL ITSELF (as they very rarely do)actually began to begin to form, though it ultimately failed.

In this case, literally the reason the convection is firing up is BECAUSE OF THE BAD SHEAR. It's the ULL causing it.

I don't see any indication on the models this ever gets favorable UL conditions in the fairly brief time it would ever have over water.

And based on the models and the way things are shaping up the EPAC thing is MUCH closer to forming something; and the outflow from that would still horribly affect this wave.

The current surface pressure in Merida, Yucatan, is 1015 mb. This is purely upper-level based stuff. It's not remotely close to being anything.


And of course on the satellite right now you can see outflow-boundaries galore shooting out from it to the West; that's a terrible indication for tropical development, and reflective of the poor conditions for it.
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#32 Postby Thunder44 » Fri Jul 09, 2004 6:19 pm

The convection seems to be already pulsing down on the north side :(
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Rainband

#33 Postby Rainband » Fri Jul 09, 2004 6:21 pm

HURAKAN wrote:
Rainband wrote:Time will tell. NOGAPS has it moving west into Mexico!! :wink:


But the disturbance or a closed low pressure.
at the time the run intialized a blob of convection. If a low forms...it may be a different story. Time will tell :wink:
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Anonymous

#34 Postby Anonymous » Sat Jul 10, 2004 3:20 am

Well it is 3:00A.M. and the blob is still a blob and a deep shade of orange red if I may say so myself. Maybe it will give us something to watch today. I didn't see how big the blob was this afternoon but it really doesn't look to bad right now.
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