WeatherEmperor wrote:boca_chris wrote:WeatherEmporer, no that was true a few days ago, a real ridge is forecasted to build off the east coast of the US within a couple of days that will steer it west...nothing to do with intensity..
boca-chris even the NHC mentioned this in their discussion. As per their 11am discussion that very same ridge you are mentioning is forecast to have a weakness in it and move towards the east allowing Irene to go more northward. The facts are the facts regardless of what my opinion is or what yours are. But you could be right afterall. Thats why once again the waiting game continues until......the 00Z models come out.... And it has alot to do with intensity because the pro-mets here even agreed with me that had Irene REALLY intensified like it was forecast to do so, it would have gone fishing long time ago.
<RICKY>
Quick comment on that idea…
A few days ago there was a weakness in the mean-layer (500MB) that would have tugged Irene NW if it was being steered in that layer…but since it was caught in the low-level flow it did not respond.
However…the mean layer flow is now oriented more E/W so that the poleward movement will be less if/when Irene gets strong enough to get back into the mean layer steering flow. Also…given the GFS’s latest solution with more ridging…which was not accounted for in the latest forecast discussion…the confidence in the models right now is shot.
Note the existing flow pattern analysis for a storm down in the 990mb to 999mb range (moderate tropical storm):
http://cimss.ssec.wisc.edu/tropic/real- ... 8dlm2.html
For a stronger hurricane…the flow is even more E/W:
http://cimss.ssec.wisc.edu/tropic/real- ... 8dlm4.html
Actually for a weak storm there is more NW flow in the low levels than anyplace right now:
http://cimss.ssec.wisc.edu/tropic/real- ... 8dlm1.html
So in this case…given the CURRENT pattern (this will change) the low levels would produce more northerly component than the mean layer…which is a flip from how it usually works.
MW



