11 PM DISCUSSION... A tad weird IMO... but read...
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- yoda
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11 PM DISCUSSION... A tad weird IMO... but read...
Hurricane Jeanne Discussion Number 50
Statement as of 11:00 PM EDT on September 25, 2004
The eye is moving onshore over Martin and St. Lucie counties. On
radar over the past couple of hours...an inner eyewall was observed
to dissipate. Jeanne has a large 40 N mi diameter eye...with a
large radius of maximum winds...about 45 N mi. The eyewall
replacement probably played a role in preventing any additional
strengthening of the hurricane. In fact...sfmr and flight level
wind observations at this point do not quite support the 100 kt
intensity estimate...however the aircraft has not yet finished its
survey of the Hurricane.
Jeanne has been moving mostly westward over the past few hours...and
is still expected to make a gradual turn to the right as it moves
around the western periphery of a deep-layer high pressure system.
The current NHC track forecast is a little to the left and slightly
slower than that from the previous advisory. Late in the forecast
period...Jeanne should be accelerating in the westerlies and losing
tropical characteristics to the south and southeast of the Canadian
Maritimes. This forecast lies between the dynamical consensus and
the GFS track.
The Vero Beach fcmp tower just reported sustained winds of 75 mph
with a gust to 104 mph.
Winds of hurricane force could occur as far as 100 miles inland
along the track of Jeanne.
Forecaster Pasch
forecast positions and Max winds
initial 26/0300z 27.2n 80.0w 100 kt
12hr VT 26/1200z 28.0n 81.5w 65 kt...inland
24hr VT 27/0000z 29.2n 82.9w 45 kt...inland
36hr VT 27/1200z 31.0n 83.5w 30 kt...inland
48hr VT 28/0000z 33.0n 83.0w 25 kt...inland
72hr VT 29/0000z 38.0n 75.5w 30 kt...inland
96hr VT 30/0000z 42.0n 65.0w 40 kt...becoming extratropical
120hr VT 01/0000z 45.0n 54.0w 50 kt...extratropical
$$
Statement as of 11:00 PM EDT on September 25, 2004
The eye is moving onshore over Martin and St. Lucie counties. On
radar over the past couple of hours...an inner eyewall was observed
to dissipate. Jeanne has a large 40 N mi diameter eye...with a
large radius of maximum winds...about 45 N mi. The eyewall
replacement probably played a role in preventing any additional
strengthening of the hurricane. In fact...sfmr and flight level
wind observations at this point do not quite support the 100 kt
intensity estimate...however the aircraft has not yet finished its
survey of the Hurricane.
Jeanne has been moving mostly westward over the past few hours...and
is still expected to make a gradual turn to the right as it moves
around the western periphery of a deep-layer high pressure system.
The current NHC track forecast is a little to the left and slightly
slower than that from the previous advisory. Late in the forecast
period...Jeanne should be accelerating in the westerlies and losing
tropical characteristics to the south and southeast of the Canadian
Maritimes. This forecast lies between the dynamical consensus and
the GFS track.
The Vero Beach fcmp tower just reported sustained winds of 75 mph
with a gust to 104 mph.
Winds of hurricane force could occur as far as 100 miles inland
along the track of Jeanne.
Forecaster Pasch
forecast positions and Max winds
initial 26/0300z 27.2n 80.0w 100 kt
12hr VT 26/1200z 28.0n 81.5w 65 kt...inland
24hr VT 27/0000z 29.2n 82.9w 45 kt...inland
36hr VT 27/1200z 31.0n 83.5w 30 kt...inland
48hr VT 28/0000z 33.0n 83.0w 25 kt...inland
72hr VT 29/0000z 38.0n 75.5w 30 kt...inland
96hr VT 30/0000z 42.0n 65.0w 40 kt...becoming extratropical
120hr VT 01/0000z 45.0n 54.0w 50 kt...extratropical
$$
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- yoda
- Category 5

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senorpepr wrote:What are you finding that is weird?
This part:
In fact...sfmr and flight level
wind observations at this point do not quite support the 100 kt
intensity estimate...however the aircraft has not yet finished its
survey of the Hurricane.
If so... wouldn't this mean that they had upgraded prematurely? Or would this mean its a CAT 2 at landfall is the aircraft agrees with what the SFMR and the flight level winds say?
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- senorpepr
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yoda wrote:senorpepr wrote:What are you finding that is weird?
This part:
In fact...sfmr and flight level
wind observations at this point do not quite support the 100 kt
intensity estimate...however the aircraft has not yet finished its
survey of the Hurricane.
If so... wouldn't this mean that they had upgraded prematurely? Or would this mean its a CAT 2 at landfall is the aircraft agrees with what the SFMR and the flight level winds say?
No, if I'm not mistaken, recon confirmed the cat 3 status earlier. However, it appears as if Jeanne weakened slightly to cat 2 status before landfall. Radar also confirmed this as the eye weakened a bit.
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- yoda
- Category 5

- Posts: 7874
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- Location: Springfield VA (20 mins south of DC)
- Contact:
senorpepr wrote:yoda wrote:senorpepr wrote:What are you finding that is weird?
This part:
In fact...sfmr and flight level
wind observations at this point do not quite support the 100 kt
intensity estimate...however the aircraft has not yet finished its
survey of the Hurricane.
If so... wouldn't this mean that they had upgraded prematurely? Or would this mean its a CAT 2 at landfall is the aircraft agrees with what the SFMR and the flight level winds say?
Ah.. ok. So this MAY, MAY suggest that Jeanne made landfall as a CAT 2?
No, if I'm not mistaken, recon confirmed the cat 3 status earlier. However, it appears as if Jeanne weakened slightly to cat 2 status before landfall. Radar also confirmed this as the eye weakened a bit.
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- senorpepr
- Military Met/Moderator

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bahamaswx wrote:Jeanne hasn't made landfall yet
Actually, it has along the barrier islands.
Last edited by senorpepr on Sat Sep 25, 2004 10:13 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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- senorpepr
- Military Met/Moderator

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bahamaswx wrote:senorpepr wrote:bahamaswx wrote:Jeanne hasn't made landfall yet
Actually, it has along the barrier islands.
I thought landfall was the center of the eye? Unless these barrier islands are much further away from the mainland than I'm figuring...
Well, you could look at it either way. However, the eye is making landfall. Since part of the eye has made landfall, landfall has occurred. On the other hand, the vortex of the storm -- the centroid of the eye -- has not made landfall.
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weatherlover427
yoda wrote:senorpepr wrote:What are you finding that is weird?
This part:
In fact...sfmr and flight level
wind observations at this point do not quite support the 100 kt
intensity estimate...however the aircraft has not yet finished its survey of the Hurricane.
If so... wouldn't this mean that they had upgraded prematurely? Or would this mean its a CAT 2 at landfall is the aircraft agrees with what the SFMR and the flight level winds say?
Read the part I highlighted.
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