Larry, you are probably going to get some pretty scary weather down your way, whatever run you choose today!12Z EPS hour 120: near ATL vs 0Z EPS hour 132 near Augusta consistent with westward shift Storm5 just mentioned.
Larry, you are probably going to get some pretty scary weather down your way, whatever run you choose today!12Z EPS hour 120: near ATL vs 0Z EPS hour 132 near Augusta consistent with westward shift Storm5 just mentioned.
It's hard not to root for that one OTS member!As Larry mentioned with his super fast eps lol![]()
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Outlier ftw!It's hard not to root for that one OTS member!
Larry, you are probably going to get some pretty scary weather down your way, whatever run you choose today!
Maybe for the coast but inland areas of those states would still have big issuesUKMET + EURO + EPS. VS GFS. This is looking a lot better for the GA/SC coasts. Finally feeling slightly better about this for mby.
Problem with that is that that was one Euro run, and it's hard to say "no need to evacuate" based on a single run of a single model. They go based on what the National Hurricane Center/National Weather Service tells them, and at this point, NHC has not changed the track.Did these people not just see the Euro? If you are on the coast and that verifies you are more safe staying put.
"GA, mandatory evac. all counties East of I-95, SC evac. is voluntary now, likely mandatory 10AM Saturday for coastal counties. Colleges on the coast closing now, asking students to go home."
Well shouldn't they tell people to give it another day to see if the models stick to this western track?Problem with that is that that was one Euro run, and it's hard to say "no need to evacuate" based on a single run of a single model. They go based on what the National Hurricane Center/National Weather Service tells them, and at this point, NHC has not changed the track.
Looks like gfs and especially euro moving quicker with that trof in NE. Building heights east of Irma.I just have a hard time buying into the fact that it would not feel the weakness sooner and turn North . Someone help me out. That's a massive weakness and a powerful storm . 1+2 = poleward
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They might a little bit but nothing drastic. Like you won't see it over Atlanta . Still plenty of time to slowly shift the track west or east . Let's remember , just cause there was a west trend in the 12z runs does not mean it can't trend back east . Still lots of shifts expected over the coming 24-36 hoursWonder if the NHC is going to shift there track since they're so in love with the euro.
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This too. Someone tell me this will be weaker please.This would be horrible![]()
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Well shouldn't they tell people to give it another day to see if the models stick to this western track?
Hey man!Here they come, walkin down the street... hey, hey their the SW's....
Tilt your head to the right and tell me that doesn't look like a gremlin over the N central plains getting ready to throw a wrench into all of this
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To answer this, this is right nowWell shouldn't they tell people to give it another day to see if the models stick to this western track?
Million dollar question. That's why they call them GremlinsHey man!
See that but what way does the wrench turn?
That map is horrendously wrong over GA, NC and SC. If the 12z GFS verified, I can see 60-70%, maybe more, over upstate SC into the mountains of NC.Based on Matthew, outages could easily be far higher than the 20-40% predicted for the GA coast. I'd think 90%+, unfortunately.
My nephew in Palm Beach County said roads are horrible, staying put.You can't. Not enough time to do orderly evacuation.
Cat 1 you say? Can we get the giant fans out soon? This keeps sounding worse and worse. I'm hoping for the best that it weakens, but it is sounding worse each hour it gets closer.Hmm, Brad Nitz was just talking about the NHC track of Hurricane Irma and it updated to the 5pm track live on air. It's a shift to the west. It showed Irma still a Cat 1 over NE GA.
Hmm, Brad Nitz was just talking about the NHC track of Hurricane Irma and it updated to the 5pm track live on air. It's a shift to the west. It showed Irma still a Cat 1 over NE GA.
The west shift continuesForecast advisory has Irma inland south Georgia an 80 knot hurricane, then 40 knot TS in Knoxville. Given that, I expect Irma to pass Athens as a 75 mph to 70 mph storm.
And here comes the panic I'm sure. I expected the wobble of the models with this morning going east, then it going west again. Watch them wobble a bit more, but I'm sure this is going to end horribly for all of the Floridian peninsula. It's not looking good for all of GA and parts of SC.The west shift continues
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