Astro_man92 wrote:Astro_man92 wrote:Opal storm wrote:HouTXmetro wrote:Astro_man92 wrote:Stormcenter wrote:Opal storm wrote:deltadog03 wrote:Opal storm wrote:HouTXmetro wrote:deltadog03 wrote:ok, whre could this go inland at??
Just a wild guess, but anywhere from Missisippi to Corpus, TX
I don't think this will go to Texas,let alone develop into anything.Even if something does come out it will probably go inland towards the northern Gulf coast area.(SE LA to FL panhandle).
how do you figure?? just wondering....the high is building in
It's a 100 miles off the coast,if it moves due west it will crash into SE LA.Unless the high moves it WSW.
The spin I'm looking at is further south than 100 miles and it would not crash into SE La. if it moved westward.
http://www.rap.ucar.edu/weather/satelli ... duration=7
and i'm looking at the batch of thunder storms that was over Florida about an hour or so ago
so which is it??????????? which system is our system to watch????????
People, People, just uses the NHC map and overlay it with the frontal boundary feature. The area of L pressure is WELL offshore and if it moved due west it would not crash into Louisiana.
http://www.ssd.noaa.gov/PS/TROP/DATA/RT ... -loop.html
Fine then,a category 5 for Texas,happy now?
I heard more than once that it was 100 miles or so offshore but I guess I heard wrong,I deeply apologize for being wrong.This thing is way too close too land for any significant development anyway and if it did move west SE LA would disrupt it.![]()
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lol
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all of these quotes are starting to form an optical illusion![]()
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I needed that. I'm STILL laughing Astro_man92!!!!!!!!!!!





