Flare Up Heading ENE?
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Flare Up Heading ENE?
The flare up in the Gulf sure looks to me like it is generally heading ENE. Question for more trained eyes ... am I jumping to a wrong conclusion based on the various satellite loops out his morning?
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Stormcenter
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Re: Flare Up Heading ENE?
BillC wrote:The flare up in the Gulf sure looks to me like it is generally heading ENE. Question for more trained eyes ... am I jumping to a wrong conclusion based on the various satellite loops out his morning?
Yes probably.
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jlauderdal
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Re: Flare Up Heading ENE?
BillC wrote:The flare up in the Gulf sure looks to me like it is generally heading ENE. Question for more trained eyes ... am I jumping to a wrong conclusion based on the various satellite loops out his morning?
yes the system is heading generally to the NE and will continue to do so..SW winds are driving this sytem.
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Dean4Storms
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I believe we are seeing a couple new things here. One, the low has begun moving in a NE direction near 10mph and is centered just under the western edge of the convection. Secondly, with it's forward speed and the diffluence from the convective outflow aloft the shear's effect has been lessened to a degree this AM. I believe we will see begin to see some steady if not rapid organization today if this trend continues.
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Rainband
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Looking at the ir4 sat pic shows me the center is pretty much stationary with most of the flare-up being blown of NE. If there is any movement of the center it appears to still be meandering to me. I would still expect an initial N or NNE movement with a turn to the NE after that. Expected "landfall" of the system, whatever it becomes, would be N GOM coast probably somewhere along the MS/AL/NW FL coast. Intensity, whetherthis is a baroclinic or tropical system will IMO be at a maximum in the strong TS area. Still too much shear present over the N GOM and N GOM coast.
http://weather.msfc.nasa.gov/cgi-bin/post-goes
http://weather.msfc.nasa.gov/cgi-bin/post-goes
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Dean4Storms
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vbhoutex wrote:Looking at the ir4 sat pic shows me the center is pretty much stationary with most of the flare-up being blown of NE. If there is any movement of the center it appears to still be meandering to me. I would still expect an initial N or NNE movement with a turn to the NE after that. Expected "landfall" of the system, whatever it becomes, would be N GOM coast probably somewhere along the MS/AL/NW FL coast. Intensity, whetherthis is a baroclinic or tropical system will IMO be at a maximum in the strong TS area. Still too much shear present over the N GOM and N GOM coast.
http://weather.msfc.nasa.gov/cgi-bin/post-goes
I don't know what you are looking at but at the RAMDIS site using the floater I can easily make the NE movement. On top of that, the position of the center is being mentioned near 24n 96 even by the NHC and as of last night it was near 22n 97w so even that translates into a NNE to NE movement.
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Dean4Storms wrote:vbhoutex wrote:Looking at the ir4 sat pic shows me the center is pretty much stationary with most of the flare-up being blown of NE. If there is any movement of the center it appears to still be meandering to me. I would still expect an initial N or NNE movement with a turn to the NE after that. Expected "landfall" of the system, whatever it becomes, would be N GOM coast probably somewhere along the MS/AL/NW FL coast. Intensity, whetherthis is a baroclinic or tropical system will IMO be at a maximum in the strong TS area. Still too much shear present over the N GOM and N GOM coast.
http://weather.msfc.nasa.gov/cgi-bin/post-goes
I don't know what you are looking at but at the RAMDIS site using the floater I can easily make the NE movement. On top of that, the position of the center is being mentioned near 24n 96 even by the NHC and as of last night it was near 22n 97w so even that translates into a NNE to NE movement.
RAMDIS is a good site, BUT there are not enough visible pictures yet to get a good idea of where the actual llcc is located. The IR pictures certainly give the impression that its moving NE but the center is likely on the extreme SW side of all the convection and what you are seeing is the thunderstorms being blown NE.
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Stormcenter
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tw861 wrote:Dean4Storms wrote:vbhoutex wrote:Looking at the ir4 sat pic shows me the center is pretty much stationary with most of the flare-up being blown of NE. If there is any movement of the center it appears to still be meandering to me. I would still expect an initial N or NNE movement with a turn to the NE after that. Expected "landfall" of the system, whatever it becomes, would be N GOM coast probably somewhere along the MS/AL/NW FL coast. Intensity, whetherthis is a baroclinic or tropical system will IMO be at a maximum in the strong TS area. Still too much shear present over the N GOM and N GOM coast.
http://weather.msfc.nasa.gov/cgi-bin/post-goes
Check this loop out and if you look closely you can see the
center to far west side moving NNE.
http://www.rap.ucar.edu/weather/satelli ... itype=irbw
I don't know what you are looking at but at the RAMDIS site using the floater I can easily make the NE movement. On top of that, the position of the center is being mentioned near 24n 96 even by the NHC and as of last night it was near 22n 97w so even that translates into a NNE to NE movement.
RAMDIS is a good site, BUT there are not enough visible pictures yet to get a good idea of where the actual llcc is located. The IR pictures certainly give the impression that its moving NE but the center is likely on the extreme SW side of all the convection and what you are seeing is the thunderstorms being blown NE.
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Dean4Storms
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tw861 wrote:Dean4Storms wrote:vbhoutex wrote:Looking at the ir4 sat pic shows me the center is pretty much stationary with most of the flare-up being blown of NE. If there is any movement of the center it appears to still be meandering to me. I would still expect an initial N or NNE movement with a turn to the NE after that. Expected "landfall" of the system, whatever it becomes, would be N GOM coast probably somewhere along the MS/AL/NW FL coast. Intensity, whetherthis is a baroclinic or tropical system will IMO be at a maximum in the strong TS area. Still too much shear present over the N GOM and N GOM coast.
http://weather.msfc.nasa.gov/cgi-bin/post-goes
I don't know what you are looking at but at the RAMDIS site using the floater I can easily make the NE movement. On top of that, the position of the center is being mentioned near 24n 96 even by the NHC and as of last night it was near 22n 97w so even that translates into a NNE to NE movement.
RAMDIS is a good site, BUT there are not enough visible pictures yet to get a good idea of where the actual llcc is located. The IR pictures certainly give the impression that its moving NE but the center is likely on the extreme SW side of all the convection and what you are seeing is the thunderstorms being blown NE.
No, I see the LLC plainly using Visible IR and you are right it is on the western edge of the convection, that is why I see it. I know enough in Sat. imagery deciphering to know the difference in UL convective cloud tops being blown easterly and LL counterclockwise swirls and it's now near 24.5 and 95.5
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Rainband
actually if you look at the satellite
http://www.ssd.noaa.gov/PS/TROP/DATA/RT ... -loop.html The whole area is moving ene, not just the cloud tops
http://www.ssd.noaa.gov/PS/TROP/DATA/RT ... -loop.html The whole area is moving ene, not just the cloud tops
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Dean4Storms wrote:tw861 wrote:Dean4Storms wrote:vbhoutex wrote:Looking at the ir4 sat pic shows me the center is pretty much stationary with most of the flare-up being blown of NE. If there is any movement of the center it appears to still be meandering to me. I would still expect an initial N or NNE movement with a turn to the NE after that. Expected "landfall" of the system, whatever it becomes, would be N GOM coast probably somewhere along the MS/AL/NW FL coast. Intensity, whetherthis is a baroclinic or tropical system will IMO be at a maximum in the strong TS area. Still too much shear present over the N GOM and N GOM coast.
http://weather.msfc.nasa.gov/cgi-bin/post-goes
I don't know what you are looking at but at the RAMDIS site using the floater I can easily make the NE movement. On top of that, the position of the center is being mentioned near 24n 96 even by the NHC and as of last night it was near 22n 97w so even that translates into a NNE to NE movement.
RAMDIS is a good site, BUT there are not enough visible pictures yet to get a good idea of where the actual llcc is located. The IR pictures certainly give the impression that its moving NE but the center is likely on the extreme SW side of all the convection and what you are seeing is the thunderstorms being blown NE.
No, I see the LLC plainly using Visible IR and you are right it is on the western edge of the convection, that is why I see it. I know enough in Sat. imagery deciphering to know the difference in UL convective cloud tops being blown easterly and LL counterclockwise swirls and it's now near 24.5 and 95.5
Ok Dean, when is it going to hit Destin then?
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Stormcenter
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Dean4Storms
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tw861 wrote:Dean4Storms wrote:tw861 wrote:Dean4Storms wrote:vbhoutex wrote:Looking at the ir4 sat pic shows me the center is pretty much stationary with most of the flare-up being blown of NE. If there is any movement of the center it appears to still be meandering to me. I would still expect an initial N or NNE movement with a turn to the NE after that. Expected "landfall" of the system, whatever it becomes, would be N GOM coast probably somewhere along the MS/AL/NW FL coast. Intensity, whetherthis is a baroclinic or tropical system will IMO be at a maximum in the strong TS area. Still too much shear present over the N GOM and N GOM coast.
http://weather.msfc.nasa.gov/cgi-bin/post-goes
I don't know what you are looking at but at the RAMDIS site using the floater I can easily make the NE movement. On top of that, the position of the center is being mentioned near 24n 96 even by the NHC and as of last night it was near 22n 97w so even that translates into a NNE to NE movement.
RAMDIS is a good site, BUT there are not enough visible pictures yet to get a good idea of where the actual llcc is located. The IR pictures certainly give the impression that its moving NE but the center is likely on the extreme SW side of all the convection and what you are seeing is the thunderstorms being blown NE.
No, I see the LLC plainly using Visible IR and you are right it is on the western edge of the convection, that is why I see it. I know enough in Sat. imagery deciphering to know the difference in UL convective cloud tops being blown easterly and LL counterclockwise swirls and it's now near 24.5 and 95.5
Ok Dean, when is it going to hit Destin then?
Did I say something about Destin? No, but being that you ask the whole north Gulf Coast needs to monitor this system, even Destin.
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