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Tropical Major Hurricane Milton

Wow! The 18Z ICON drives Milton right to the northern Yucatan coast.

Edited to add, look at Larry's precursor TS off the Florida coast too.
View attachment 152720
Yeahs that's a lot of early SE motion. If that's right then a father southeast landfall would be expected. Short term motion so we'll know soon enough if it's right
 
Models were showing these dual lows the other day and having difficulty in resolving which one would be dominant. I want to say the GFS actually showed both with some development at one point. I don't think it will change track all that much unless it really blows up
From the 5 PM NHC discussion. I'd call this evolution non-trivial.

"Milton is moving just south of due east at about 6 kt. This
equatorward motion has been more than expected probably due to a
stronger low/ mid-level frontal low over the northeastern Gulf of
Mexico. The frontal feature is forecast to weaken while it moves
across Florida and gradually lose its influence on Milton."
 
Yeah the big issue will be as it nears Florida it will become increasingly post tropical and that always expands the wind field. If you notice as soon as it clears Florida the NHC has it post tropical
Like Sandy..
Yep. And looking at the models it seems like there will be quite a strong surge along the East coast of northern Florida that’s being enhanced with the transition. That area rarely gets a strong surge from a hurricane.
 
18Z Icon landfalls like the 12Z at Sarasota but it is delayed til very late Wed night.
It wasn't long ago that we were expecting a storm to move on an anomalous ENE trajectory into the Florida peninsula. Now it looks to be approaching the coast on a more traditional NE to NNE path. This alone makes forecasting the ultimate landfall location more challenging.
 
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Couple of things to watch. First the lead wave/ system is going to want to suppress the ridge out front which would want to trend Milton SE. If more separation occurs though there will be a potential for height rises behind the lead wave ahead of the incoming conus trough which would lead to a NW trend.
Second I'm not sure how beneficial it may be in the grand scheme but it seems like there's going to be a race between landfall and the start of ET and the system getting a little more ragged. Like I said it may end up not making a huge difference but hopefully it can help
 
Couple of things to watch. First the lead wave/ system is going to want to suppress the ridge out front which would want to trend Milton SE. If more separation occurs though there will be a potential for height rises behind the lead wave ahead of the incoming conus trough which would lead to a NW trend.
Second I'm not sure how beneficial it may be in the grand scheme but it seems like there's going to be a race between landfall and the start of ET and the system getting a little more ragged. Like I said it may end up not making a huge difference but hopefully it can help
The frontal low if moving east in tandem with Milton would bump the ridge ahead up a little but it would also should serve to also keep Milton moving a bit more easterly. The other thing to watch is the shortwave trough that the GFS kind of digs a little, which it was showing on the earlier runs, while most other modeling kept more zonal flow over the Deep South
 
FORECAST POSITIONS AND MAX WINDS

INIT 07/0300Z 22.4N 93.1W 80 KT 90 MPH
12H 07/1200Z 22.2N 91.9W 95 KT 110 MPH
24H 08/0000Z 22.3N 90.2W 110 KT 125 MPH
36H 08/1200Z 22.9N 88.3W 125 KT 145 MPH
48H 09/0000Z 24.2N 86.3W 125 KT 145 MPH

60H 09/1200Z 25.8N 84.5W 115 KT 130 MPH
72H 10/0000Z 27.5N 82.3W 100 KT 115 MPH...INLAND
96H 11/0000Z 29.6N 77.1W 65 KT 75 MPH...POST-TROP/EXTRATROP
120H 12/0000Z 31.0N 71.0W 50 KT 60 MPH...POST-TROP/EXTRATROP
 
Don't see an inland M much View attachment 152732
Milton is looking more ominous tonight. The IR sat shows an expanding CDO and continued organization. The situation for FL is looking more ominous. Landfall as a major with increasing forward speed will expand the damage inland across the entire FL peninsula. This severely threatens central FL and presents coastal threats of wind and surge damage on the east coast.

They are really not ready for this on the west coast of FL after Helene. Tampa Bay - St. Pete area hasn't experienced this kind of impact in a lifetime. It's time to send some prayers up for our FL brothers.
 
Milton is looking more ominous tonight. The IR sat shows an expanding CDO and continued organization. The situation for FL is looking more ominous. Landfall as a major with increasing forward speed will expand the damage inland across the entire FL peninsula. This severely threatens central FL and presents coastal threats of wind and surge damage on the east coast.

They are really not ready for this on the west coast of FL after Helene. Tampa Bay - St. Pete area hasn't experienced this kind of impact in a lifetime. It's time to send some prayers up for our FL brothers.

Yeah 1848 nearly every home in Tampa was destroyed so yeah...

And that was with hardly any population. The article about 1848 mentions uninhabited Florida lol
 
As stated above, classic RI look. I think it intensifies to high 920s/low 930s until it has an eyewall replacement cycle and plateaus a little before weakening.

The forecasting conundrum will be how quickly it weakens. This is a hostile look for a storm:
1728271490630.png
It will be dry- a lot of board members will see real fall mornings this week. That airmass will surround Milton by the time it is approaching Florida. The mixture of shear and eye wall replacements will make dry air intrusions easy - Milton will be in decay by the time it approaches Tampa. When this decay starts probably determines whether this storm is just "bad" or "generationally bad" for Tampa.

But yes it will put on a show before that.
 
As stated above, classic RI look. I think it intensifies to high 920s/low 930s until it has an eyewall replacement cycle and plateaus a little before weakening.

The forecasting conundrum will be how quickly it weakens. This is a hostile look for a storm:
View attachment 152733
It will be dry- a lot of board members will see real fall mornings this week. That airmass will surround Milton by the time it is approaching Florida. The mixture of shear and eye wall replacements will make dry air intrusions easy - Milton will be in decay by the time it approaches Tampa. When this decay starts probably determines whether this storm is just "bad" or "generationally bad" for Tampa.

But yes it will put on a show before that.

Yeah the only thing about that is I remember Katrina falling apart too

I think Tampas best chance is it going south. Offshore flow...
 
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