Uh oh... TD 7 getting it together....
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- dixiebreeze
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Uh oh... TD 7 getting it together....
Or at least it certainly appears that way in the latest IR:
http://www.ssd.noaa.gov/PS/TROP/DATA/RT/WATL/IR4/20.jpg
http://www.ssd.noaa.gov/PS/TROP/DATA/RT/WATL/IR4/20.jpg
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- Hurricanehink
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- charleston_hugo_veteran
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- LAwxrgal
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Guys we're all watching Frances (and for good reason) and Gaston is sneaking under our noses. Will Gaston influence Frances' path?
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Andrew 92/Isidore & Lili 02/Bill 03/Katrina & Rita 05/Gustav & Ike 08/Isaac 12 (flooded my house)/Harvey 17/Barry 19/Cristobal 20/Claudette 21/Ida 21 (In the Eye)/Francine 24
Wake me up when November ends
Wake me up when November ends
- adelphi_sky
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PurdueWx80
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charleston_hugo_veteran wrote:SH*T...I hate things like this sneeking up on ya.......
Some people in here have been talking about it for almost a week.
Anyway pressures along the coast and the buoys are showing drops that are more than what would typically be associated with daytime heating. The satellite presentation tells me this thing could pop pretty quick. There is excellent anti-cyclonic flow above the surface low, so all it would take for a TS to form is a blowup of convection tonight. Waters are certainly warm enough for a hurricane, but the proximity to land may prevent that. Long-range radar from Charleston also shows a tightening low level center. The biggest problem I see right now is major flooding along the coastal plain and eventually up into the mountains as it moves north slowly next week. If Frances gets in there too, the ground will have been primed for catastrophic flooding. Something else to think about - with a saturated ground, it doesn't take a strong hurricane to uproot a lot of trees.
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- charleston_hugo_veteran
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PurdueWx80 wrote:charleston_hugo_veteran wrote:SH*T...I hate things like this sneeking up on ya.......
Some people in here have been talking about it for almost a week.
Anyway pressures along the coast and the buoys are showing drops that are more than what would typically be associated with daytime heating. The satellite presentation tells me this thing could pop pretty quick. There is excellent anti-cyclonic flow above the surface low, so all it would take for a TS to form is a blowup of convection tonight. Waters are certainly warm enough for a hurricane, but the proximity to land may prevent that. Long-range radar from Charleston also shows a tightening low level center. The biggest problem I see right now is major flooding along the coastal plain and eventually up into the mountains as it moves north slowly next week. If Frances gets in there too, the ground will have been primed for catastrophic flooding. Something else to think about - with a saturated ground, it doesn't take a strong hurricane to uproot a lot of trees.
Yeah, I know we have been talking about it but I was not that concerned with it, kinda thought it would just drift off..........
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- Trader Ron
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TLHR
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canegrl04 wrote:Gaston is a short term storm.Its so close to the coast,once that ridge takes over,Gaston will be immediately pushed to land.I don't really see it having an affect on Frances' path. For everyone outside of the Carolina's Frances is the one to keep an eye on .
The Carolinas obviously need to monitor Frances, too.
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PurdueWx80
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I really think this storm is going to become Gaston very rapidly. The visible shot has a very well formed circulation, better than many TDs. Also, the inner core of the circulation is spinning quite rapidly, and there have been some gusts over 30 kts along the SC coast (in showers and storms) over the last hour. I don't think this will get as strong as Alex, but I can say with relatively certainty that Gaston will be born by 11 p.m. tonight.
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- charleston_hugo_veteran
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- PTrackerLA
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