• Hello, please take a minute to check out our awesome content, contributed by the wonderful members of our community. We hope you'll add your own thoughts and opinions by making a free account!

Tropical Major Hurricane Irma (Part 2)

Intellicast (www.intellicast.com) offers a nice composite radar - use Pan & Zoom mode for best results.
irmaintellicast.png
 
I wager there will be some statistics from that picture from KW.. as in casualties.
 
Watching key west cam at southern most point, waves crashing over wall. People taking pics and a police car just drove by
 
It's like the scene from Independence day with all the people on top of the building...
 
Few thousand feet off the ground but you get the idea

694491db9a163125d8a7cefbc6ef5dfe.jpg


Sent from my SM-G920V using Tapatalk
 
Did this run of the Euro still have those crazy wind gusts for NGa and Upstate SC? Like the 70-90mph ,, or did it back off?
 
Looks like Ffc is holding off on any wind products.


Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
 
Did this run of the Euro still have those crazy wind gusts for NGa and Upstate SC? Like the 70-90mph ,, or did it back off?

Backed off just a little for us but it still had very high gusts.


Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
 
Does anyone have a good flash flood watch map for GA? I don't think the NWS from Atlanta made one up yet.

Sent from my SM-J700T1 using Tapatalk
 
The 50-100 mile difference of how it comes up the coast is gonna make all the difference for parts of Panhandle/E AL/GA
 
My question is , are ensembles even useful at this point ??

Sent from my SM-J320VPP using Tapatalk
Yeah, the spaghetti plots are mostly all in line now with the track of Irma.

Sent from my SM-J327T1 using Tapatalk
 
She took a taste of Cuba and does not like soil ... Does she like Tampa cigars? Or Big Bend grouper sandwiches? Or Creole? Or is she hummin' "Alabama Getaway"? This thing is far from settled ...
it's not gonna surprise me if it stays west and hits the Florida panhandle. Models have been trending west for some time now.
 
Just a note and my opinion here, not questioning the NHC's track. The last time Irma started a full on ERC it took on a westward component that ended up with it land falling into Cuba. If this is the beginning of another it could get interesting. Remember even though ridges and trofs are drawn as nice smoth lines on maps and graphics they are anything but especially from the surface up. There will be parts of the ridge at different levels that stick out farther or digress inward farther. There are "ripples (Phil)" of fluctuating pressures around the periphery of these features not smooth lines. That's a reason they stair step when rounding ridges.. As Irma goes through an ERC (If thats whats getting ready to happen) different levels of that ridge will have different pressure effects on the storms core as it slightly weakens and re-organizes. The same is true for the trof affecting it. The reason I bring it up is because the angle it is approaching, a 5 mile jog now could mean 25 up by Tampa when/if it gets there. These subtleties are very hard to forecast especially when the features are over water where there is very little sampling, the math has to do the forecasting. This storm really is riding a fine line and a subtle detail could make very large difference in the next 36 hours. Just a :weenie:thought from a :weenie::D
 
Well, being in the bullseye early seems to be paying off. It's getting further and further away with it's low center. Opens up a whole lot of stink for folks south and west. T
 
Back
Top