ForsythSnow
Moderator
Well this is bad. Not good when you have Ryan saying it's got a clear path to a cat 5.
It's available on Tropical Tidbits.There have been references that the legacy GFS is still available. I use several model paywall sites and I don't think I have access.
Does anyone have a link to the legacy GFS to share?
It's still readily available, tropical tidbits has it as well as Pivotal and others.There have been references that the legacy GFS is still available. I use several model paywall sites and I don't think I have access.
Does anyone have a link to the legacy GFS to share?
It's still readily available, tropical tidbits has it as well as Pivotal and others.
Long range NAM caveats...but Dorian's drifting southwest towards the end of the run.
honestly seems like if it were to eventually go north, that'd be the worse solution. Allows for more time to intensify over warm water.
great observation! It almost appears to be moving in a very short term Westerly direction.And it has made up "lost ground" to the west, yesterday I mentioned 25N, 70W as a point of reference b/c ofc track and most modeling had it passing right over that point.... might actually go south of that now. Dang it, was hoping for slower which meant ots
SUMMARY OF 1100 AM AST...1500 UTC...INFORMATION
-----------------------------------------------
LOCATION...24.5N 69.8W
ABOUT 480 MI...770 KM E OF THE NORTHWESTERN BAHAMAS
ABOUT 660 MI...1060 KM E OF WEST PALM BEACH FLORIDA
MAXIMUM SUSTAINED WINDS...110 MPH...175 KM/H
PRESENT MOVEMENT...NW OR 310 DEGREES AT 10 MPH...17 KM/H
MINIMUM CENTRAL PRESSURE...972 MB...28.71 INCHES
I think satellite images were deceiving until the eye popped (maybe?) still moving at 10 mph per NHCLooks like he’s creeping along for now.
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Sometime today.When do y'all think Florida gets watches posted?
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Yeah most likely later today or tonight... considering the potential dire situation that's about to unfold sooner rather than later would make sense.Sometime today.
Yeah most likely later today or tonight... considering the potential dire situation that's about to unfold sooner rather than later would make sense.
From NHC:
By the end of
the forecast period, the ridge is forecast to erode and the
steering currents will weaken, resulting in Dorian slowing down
considerably near and over the Florida peninsula. This increases
the uncertainty in the track forecast during the 4- to -5 day
period, and also will lead to a prolonged duration of wind,
storm surge, and rainfall.
Any history of storms with this type of prolonged duration of hurricane conditions in Fl? Seems they usually just cross or skirt but rarely actually crawl the spine
Frankly, I wouldn't call that remarkable. Considering the data from the models, and the issues in predictions, this is as good as it gets. It might verify and It might not. There are a great deal of unknowns....View attachment 22431***Track from Tuesday***
It’s remarkable how little the landfall area has changed in 3 days!
Goes from 140 down to 125 prior to landfall must be northerly shear?
It wasn't wrong for Michael...
Oh ok wow not goodIt's already inland when it is forecasted to be at 125.
That statement got my attention when I read discussion. They are giving thought to worse case in my opinion....Yeah most likely later today or tonight... considering the potential dire situation that's about to unfold sooner rather than later would make sense.
From NHC:
By the end of
the forecast period, the ridge is forecast to erode and the
steering currents will weaken, resulting in Dorian slowing down
considerably near and over the Florida peninsula. This increases
the uncertainty in the track forecast during the 4- to -5 day
period, and also will lead to a prolonged duration of wind,
storm surge, and rainfall.
Any history of storms with this type of prolonged duration of hurricane conditions in Fl? Seems they usually just cross or skirt but rarely actually crawl the spine
You see which way the WPC leaning as far as track down the road...Rainfall potential from the 11am advisory.
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Or bounce OTS, don't try to reflect it up this way....This is actually a really good point. While anything could happen, history is more against the stall over FL outcome atleast in my memory. Odds do suggest it either go across or bounce up toward the Carolinas.
This is why I feel like the rainfall potential map from the 11 AM advisory could be a conservative forecast.Something else to think about. If it does slow down near the southern FL coast, it will do so over the Gulf Stream with pretty high TCHP. Upwelling will not be an issue. That along with Florida being flat, should it reach Cat 4 or Cat 5, it could sustain that for a long while. That would put the northern eyewall onshore for hours before it makes landfall and starts losing some punch.