USAwx1 wrote:When the Almighty Rainstorm speaks we all must listen with our FULL attention, for she is the supreme authority on tropical meteorology.
LOL! LOL! LOL!
Yep... remember Isabel wasn't supposed to hit the EC last year either.


Moderator: S2k Moderators
Brent wrote:USAwx1 wrote:When the Almighty Rainstorm speaks we all must listen with our FULL attention, for she is the supreme authority on tropical meteorology.
LOL! LOL! LOL!
Yep... remember Isabel wasn't supposed to hit the EC last year either.![]()
USAwx1 wrote:Brent wrote:USAwx1 wrote:When the Almighty Rainstorm speaks we all must listen with our FULL attention, for she is the supreme authority on tropical meteorology.
LOL! LOL! LOL!
Yep... remember Isabel wasn't supposed to hit the EC last year either.![]()
Yep it was forecasted to be a FISH by the almightly rainstorm, while the bottom feeding weenies such as myself expected it to become a major hurricane. Who would have ever thought--not only did it become a Cat 5 hurricane, it also headed right for her. huh? who would have ever thought we could have even come close to comparing her?
rainstorm wrote:im not the only one thats gotten things wrong, but i am the only one who doesnt bring up others mistakes. looking at the sat pics, it seems to me td2 is making its own westerly shear and it is moving too fast into the death zone
Valkhorn wrote:I've been watching the VIS and Infared loops of TD2 for a while now, and I can say it's really been holding itself together well.
http://www.ssd.noaa.gov/PS/TROP/DATA/RT ... -loop.html
A look at the Visible look shows some neat things. First a LLC isn't obvious, but it is apparent that it exists once one looks a little deeper. Second, it appears to me that this wave is still moving due West, and it has been moving due West for the past day or two.
This does have me concerned since any further movement west would put the forecast track more and more south and more and more west. The trough will be very strong coming through the eastern US in the next few days (maybe even record lows here in a few days!) so if anything has a chance of picking it up, this trough could.
The two major things to look for however are primarily how much TD2 (or perhaps Bonnie by tomorrow) can wind up, and where it does start heading north.
If it makes it too far west when it turns north, it will be shredded by Hispaniola. If it turns early, it could slip through a gap in one of the islands and not be as distroyed. Even if it slams PR it'll be weakened a bit.
I still however think there is the very real chance (however slim) that it could miss the trough completely and keep heading due west. If this is the case it could keep going and hit central America. Yet, to me that's a 5% chance or less, but still possible.
The bottom line - TD2 is a very low latitude storm, so if any system has a chance of missing a trough this is it. It is wierd, in a wierd ironic way though, that a trough THIS STRONG is forecast for the eastern CONUS.
If we have Bonnie, we may be very lucky we have such an unusual trough at an unusual time of the year - and this wierd twist of fate could be our chance to catch our breath from Alex.
What do you guys think?
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 0 guests