Frank2 wrote:Oy - well, they don't call meteorology an inexact science for nothing!
Earlier this morning the system looked like it was finished, but now it seems to be making a comback.
Oh, well,
Frank
aint that the tuth, the storm is crazy
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tallywx wrote:Reminds me of Andrew. Models split evenly between it turning westward versus going out to sea. NHC holding the middle ground (WNW) for as long as possible. Recon. not being able to fix a center in Andrew for over 24 hours as its central pressure rose to 1015 mb. Then BOOM.
Reminds me of Andrew. Models split evenly between it turning westward versus going out to sea. NHC holding the middle ground (WNW) for as long as possible. Recon. not being able to fix a center in Andrew for over 24 hours as its central pressure rose to 1015 mb. Then BOOM.

CronkPSU wrote:tallywx wrote:Reminds me of Andrew. Models split evenly between it turning westward versus going out to sea. NHC holding the middle ground (WNW) for as long as possible. Recon. not being able to fix a center in Andrew for over 24 hours as its central pressure rose to 1015 mb. Then BOOM.
i wish people would stop saying this, can we call it mini-andrew or something so any dumb media folks who happen by this place don't start spreading an andrew like storm approaching the east coast reports
Sanibel wrote:I'm seeing something funny on visible. One set of surface spirals goes into a weak center up near the center west part of the convection. The other is under the strong mid-vortex that seems to be muscling the storm together at the south end of the convection.
I can't tell if this is a relocation north to the weak center like it did a few days ago, or one to the southern center - which would be a whole new deal. Cyclo-logic would dictate a north jump and not a south one - right?

Irene looks like she could lose her convection once again. There's a trough remnant in front of her pinching south.

tallywx wrote:Reminds me of Andrew. Models split evenly between it turning westward versus going out to sea. NHC holding the middle ground (WNW) for as long as possible. Recon. not being able to fix a center in Andrew for over 24 hours as its central pressure rose to 1015 mb. Then BOOM.
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