Steve Lyons:The Rate Ivan Is Deepening..
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Re: Steve Lyons:The Rate Ivan Is Deepening..
canegrl04 wrote:he could become cat 5 in next 12 hours![]()
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Not necessarily what we wanted to hear. I hope everyone in the islands are paying attention.
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The posts in this forum are NOT official forecast and should not be used as such. They are just the opinion of the poster and may or may not be backed by sound meteorological data. They are NOT endorsed by any professional institution or storm2k.org. For official information, please refer to the NHC and NWS products.
The posts in this forum are NOT official forecast and should not be used as such. They are just the opinion of the poster and may or may not be backed by sound meteorological data. They are NOT endorsed by any professional institution or storm2k.org. For official information, please refer to the NHC and NWS products.
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STORMSURGE
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btsgmdad wrote:I can't believe a storm that winds up this quickly can maintain itself all the way to the US. This may be a create its own environment storm ala Gilbert and Mitch where they are so much the dominate feature that they do their own thing. Some hope, perhaps.
Very rare for intense possibly category 5 storms to maintain that strength for long periods of time. Then again we have not had a hurricane of this intensity this far south in the Atlantic basin either. Maybe Ivan intends to rewrite the rules. Very scary indeed.
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wayoutfront
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clueless newbie
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btsgmdad wrote:I can't believe a storm that winds up this quickly can maintain itself all the way to the US.
If the conditions were optimal. I would say that it could. However, it is going into slightly cooler waters and for sure will interact with land at least a bit. Low shear environment might not persist all 7+ days it needs to reach US. Eyewall replacement cycles will also play their role, although only fluctuating its intensity, not bringing it down significantly.
I think that if it becomes an annular hurricane, it can maintain its cat4-5 intensity also in the slightly cooler waters ahead, as those hurricanes seem to be somehow more efficient.
This may be a create its own environment storm ala Gilbert and Mitch where they are so much the dominate feature that they do their own thing. Some hope, perhaps.
I am not buying 'create its own environment'. For that,
1. the hurricane must be very intense
2. it must be also very large (its area of deep convection, no just the outflow)
3. there should not be strong features around, i.e. it can supress/change weak or maybe moderate ridges/troughs, but strong ridges/troughs would steer it anyway
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SouthernWx
In looking at the model guidance and forecast synoptic situation 4-7 days down the road....IMHO folks in south Florida had better hope and pray Ivan plows into those 10,000' foot mountains on Hispanola.....because if Ivan skirts east or south of them, I don't see anything to prevent this from being a very intense hurricane as it approaches south Florida or the Keys.
I saw 155 mph hurricane David's core shredded by Hispanola in 1979....the same mountains that tore the guts from Georges in 1998; and neither hurricane ever regained cat-3 status.
Southern Florida may very well experience a hurricane by this time next week, but it would be far better to be another 105 mph Georges or 95 mph David at Florida landfall as opposed to a 170+ mph Andrew.
I saw 155 mph hurricane David's core shredded by Hispanola in 1979....the same mountains that tore the guts from Georges in 1998; and neither hurricane ever regained cat-3 status.
Southern Florida may very well experience a hurricane by this time next week, but it would be far better to be another 105 mph Georges or 95 mph David at Florida landfall as opposed to a 170+ mph Andrew.
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- Stormsfury
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OtherHD wrote:While the current explosive deepening of Ivan is impressive, it is certainly not unprecedented.
Keith in 2000 went from a 65 mph TS to a 140 mph monster off the Yucatan in 24 hours. That's a 75 mph increase. He dropped from 987 to 941 MB in that time.
Thanks for the information (I don't have to research it now) ... anyway, this is the kind of deepening that's usually reserved for the WPAC ...
Conditions over Ivan are absolutely prime right now ... the western side is being enhanced by the TUTT type low created in the outflow wake of Frances stateside ... NOW, if IVAN catches up to the TUTT too fast, shearing will result on the western face and we'll see a level off or weakening mode ...
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clueless newbie wrote:btsgmdad wrote:I can't believe a storm that winds up this quickly can maintain itself all the way to the US.
If the conditions were optimal. I would say that it could. However, it is going into slightly cooler waters and for sure will interact with land at least a bit. Low shear environment might not persist all 7+ days it needs to reach US. Eyewall replacement cycles will also play their role, although only fluctuating its intensity, not bringing it down significantly.
I think that if it becomes an annular hurricane, it can maintain its cat4-5 intensity also in the slightly cooler waters ahead, as those hurricanes seem to be somehow more efficient.This may be a create its own environment storm ala Gilbert and Mitch where they are so much the dominate feature that they do their own thing. Some hope, perhaps.
I am not buying 'create its own environment'. For that,
1. the hurricane must be very intense
2. it must be also very large (its area of deep convection, no just the outflow)
3. there should not be strong features around, i.e. it can supress/change weak or maybe moderate ridges/troughs, but strong ridges/troughs would steer it anyway
One of the things to remember, NO CAT 5 has ever struck the U.S. North of 30ºN ... Camille was the furthest north for such a storm, with the Labor Day (1935) hurricane and of course, Andrew in 1992 ... one other prospect added in was the 1886 Indianola Hurricane which struck Indianola, TX ... with sustained winds analyzed by AOML at 155 MPH, also well south of the 30ºN benchmark ...
Ivan is going to encounter some more hostile conditions should IVAN continue to outrace the TUTT-type low to its west ...
SF
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- Stormsfury
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Indystorm wrote:btsgmdad wrote:I can't believe a storm that winds up this quickly can maintain itself all the way to the US. This may be a create its own environment storm ala Gilbert and Mitch where they are so much the dominate feature that they do their own thing. Some hope, perhaps.
Very rare for intense possibly category 5 storms to maintain that strength for long periods of time. Then again we have not had a hurricane of this intensity this far south in the Atlantic basin either. Maybe Ivan intends to rewrite the rules. Very scary indeed.
The longest any hurricane sustained CAT 5 status was 1950 (that analog, yet again) ... 54 hours (Hurricane Dog ... reached 185 mph for a total of 18 hours at its maxima) ... Allen was the only storm to reach CAT 5 status THREE times, each time, lasting only 24 hours or less ...
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Guest
those mountains on hispaniola are like a murderer. They are like the pitchfork, they go into the hurricanes and wrnch everything out. Pretty efficent. At least theose murderes help the U.S (unfortunatley someone has to pay the price for weakening the hurricane- Haiti and DR.) At this time I think it will graze Hispaniola (passing just to the North).
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obxhurricane
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obxhurricane wrote:Upper level SW shear will weaken Ivan at about the time he reaches the Islands...although he will still be a cat 3 at least.
Hold on down there...
We're agreed on the SW shear since Ivan is still outracing the TUTT-type low by some 5 MPH ... and furthermore, Ivan has got to have an eyewall replacement cycle soon ... the eye right now appears like a pin needle ...
FYI ...
Since 5 AM this morning, the estimated pressure drop has been 39 MB in just 15 hours ... (987 mb down to 948 mb) ...
24 hours ago ... (actually 27 hours, no 8 PM advisory yesterday) ... (994 mb down to 948 mb) ... 46 MB drop ...
36 hours ago ... (actually 39 hours, no 8 AM advisory yesterday) ... (997 mb down to 948 mb) ... 49 MB drop ...
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SootyTern
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[quote="clueless newbie] I think that if it becomes an annular hurricane, it can maintain its cat4-5 intensity also in the slightly cooler waters ahead, as those hurricanes seem to be somehow more efficient.
[quote]
What's an 'annular' hurricane?
PS-why do I think 'clueless newbie' is really Max Mayfield or Stacy Stewart or somebody going undercover?
[quote]
What's an 'annular' hurricane?
PS-why do I think 'clueless newbie' is really Max Mayfield or Stacy Stewart or somebody going undercover?
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