New center
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stormernie
New center
Hi resolution visible loop shows as of 18:15 UTC that the center is developing or has develop at or near 20.5 N 54.7 W you can see the curl in the higher cloud tops. It also looks to be heading in a direction slightly south of due west. But this can't be ascertain since the explosion of the clouds have been toward the south and southwest.
Comments welcome.
Comments welcome.
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- x-y-no
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It looks quite possible that things are getting stacked in the vicinity of that convective flare on the southern side of the envelope. There may not be a tight surface circulation yet, but I think we're headed that way tonight.
The shear in that area and directly ahead has dropped below 10 knots, so that suggests this may last for a while. I expect a return to TS status tonight.
The shear in that area and directly ahead has dropped below 10 knots, so that suggests this may last for a while. I expect a return to TS status tonight.
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- gatorcane
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don't believe that is true.
I will say that if it was true, it would certainly throw a huge monkeywrench into the forecast.
It is true, Irene does not want to turn NW so far...I expect another westward shift at 5pm followed by another at 11pm...the east coast of the US and FL need to pay attention to this one.
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- DESTRUCTION5
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Agree...This thinf is way further south that they think
http://www.ssd.noaa.gov/PS/TROP/DATA/RT ... -loop.html
Look at the IR and then click on the TPC forcasted points...
http://www.ssd.noaa.gov/PS/TROP/DATA/RT ... -loop.html
Look at the IR and then click on the TPC forcasted points...
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WeatherEmperor
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gkrangers
Don't look at the ball of convection...its hard to tell exactly where the center is right now. However, if it did reform further south, it will require a south/westward shift in the track.DESTRUCTION5 wrote:Agree...This thinf is way further south that they think
http://www.ssd.noaa.gov/PS/TROP/DATA/RT ... -loop.html
Look at the IR and then click on the TPC forcasted points...
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- deltadog03
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x-y-no wrote:It looks quite possible that things are getting stacked in the vicinity of that convective flare on the southern side of the envelope. There may not be a tight surface circulation yet, but I think we're headed that way tonight.
The shear in that area and directly ahead has dropped below 10 knots, so that suggests this may last for a while. I expect a return to TS status tonight.
hey jan, you talking about 22N or so and 53-54W??
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superfly
gkrangers wrote:Don't look at the ball of convection...its hard to tell exactly where the center is right now. However, if it did reform further south, it will require a south/westward shift in the track.DESTRUCTION5 wrote:Agree...This thinf is way further south that they think
http://www.ssd.noaa.gov/PS/TROP/DATA/RT ... -loop.html
Look at the IR and then click on the TPC forcasted points...
I see a clear center on visible near 22.2N 53.5W. IR is not good for pinpointing centers.
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DESTRUCTION5 wrote:Agree...This thinf is way further south that they think
http://www.ssd.noaa.gov/PS/TROP/DATA/RT ... -loop.html
Look at the IR and then click on the TPC forcasted points...
IR is not a good tool to find center. Look at visable, it shows LLC in the vicinity of 22.5 and 53.7.
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- x-y-no
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deltadog03 wrote:x-y-no wrote:It looks quite possible that things are getting stacked in the vicinity of that convective flare on the southern side of the envelope. There may not be a tight surface circulation yet, but I think we're headed that way tonight.
The shear in that area and directly ahead has dropped below 10 knots, so that suggests this may last for a while. I expect a return to TS status tonight.
hey jan, you talking about 22N or so and 53-54W??
That's a mid-level circulation, moving almost SW. The LLC, to the extent that there is one, is under the convection flare south of that somewhere, IMHO.
I think things are going to stack up somewhere in the leading side of that big flare this evening. Then the question is does it hold together, or does it all fly apart again?
(I'm in the "it'll hold togerther" camp at this point)
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jax
dwg71 wrote:DESTRUCTION5 wrote:Agree...This thinf is way further south that they think
http://www.ssd.noaa.gov/PS/TROP/DATA/RT ... -loop.html
Look at the IR and then click on the TPC forcasted points...
IR is not a good tool to find center. Look at visable, it shows LLC in the vicinity of 22.5 and 53.7.
that is correct dwg...
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- x-y-no
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dwg71 wrote:DESTRUCTION5 wrote:Agree...This thinf is way further south that they think
http://www.ssd.noaa.gov/PS/TROP/DATA/RT ... -loop.html
Look at the IR and then click on the TPC forcasted points...
IR is not a good tool to find center. Look at visable, it shows LLC in the vicinity of 22.5 and 53.7.
I think that circulation is an MLC, not an LLC.
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- deltadog03
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MiamiensisWx
- vbhoutex
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I still see the center at around 22.0N, 54.0W. I think the IR blob is fooling some people as the convection spreads S and W. Most definitely continues on a W or slightly S of West course. with the increasing convection and much better organization, I would expect reclassification to TS status this evening.
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- DESTRUCTION5
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WeatherEmperor
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vbhoutex wrote:I still see the center at around 22.0N, 54.0W. I think the IR blob is fooling some people as the convection spreads S and W. Most definitely continues on a W or slightly S of West course. with the increasing convection and much better organization, I would expect reclassification to TS status this evening.
after very very very close inspection I would think you are correct. It wasnt easy though.
<RICKY>
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