Dr. Jeff Masters' WunderBlog

TD 8 forms; 97L a potential threat to the Caribbean and U.S.
Posted by: Dr. Jeff Masters, 3:30 PM GMT on August 19, 2011 +33
Tropical Depression Eight formed last night near the coast of Honduras, and is headed westwards towards a landfall in Belize on Saturday. TD 8 is a small storm, so will impact a relatively small area of northern Honduras, northern Guatemala, all of Belize, and southern portions of Mexico's Yucatan Peninsula. TD 8 has just enough room between its center and the coast of Honduras to intensify into a moderate strength tropical storm with 50 - 60 mph winds before landfall. It is very unlikely TD8 has the time or room to intensify into a hurricane; NHC gave the storm just a 7% chance of making it to hurricane strength in their 11am EDT wind probability forecast. Should TD8 make it to tropical storm strength, it would be called Harvey.


Figure 1. Morning satellite image of TD 8.

Invest 97L likely to become a tropical storm next week, could threaten the U.S.
A tropical wave near 14°N 48°W, about 800 miles east of the Lesser Antilles Islands, is moving westward near 20 mph. This wave, designated Invest 97L by NHC yesterday, has seen a marked increase in its heavy thunderstorm activity this morning, but dry air to the north and west is slowing development. An impressive amount of large-scale spin is obvious in visible satellite loops, but the storm is at least a day away from forming a well-defined surface circulation. Ocean temperatures are about 28.5°C, about 2°C above the threshold needed to support a tropical storm, and wind shear is low, 5 - 10 knots.


Figure 2. Morning satellite image of the tropical wave 97L.

The computer models have shown an unusual amount of agreement in developing 97L over the past few days, and all the ingredients seem to be in place for a tropical storm to form by Monday or Tuesday as 97L crosses the Northeast Caribbean. The atmosphere is expected to be moister over the Caribbean, wind shear will remain a low 5 - 10 knots, and sea surface temperatures will increase to near 29°C. The main impediment for development will likely be two-fold: too much dry, stable air, and proximity to land.

As seen in Figure 3, there has been an unusual amount of dry, stable air in the Atlantic this year, due to a combination of dry air from Africa, and upper-atmosphere dynamics creating large areas of sinking air that dry as they warm and approach the surface. This stable air has been largely responsible for the fact that none of our seven tropical storms so far this year has made it to hurricane strength, despite the presence of sea surface temperatures that are the 3rd warmest on record across the tropical Atlantic. Tropical Storm Emily in early August encountered problems with dry air when it crossed the Northeast Caribbean, and 97L may have similar difficulties.


Figure 3. Vertical instability of the atmosphere during 2011 in the Caribbean (left) and tropical Atlantic between the Lesser Antilles Islands and coast of Africa (right.) The instability is plotted in °C, as a difference in temperature from near the surface to the upper atmosphere. Thunderstorms grow much more readily when vertical instability is high. Observed vertical instability (blue line) has been much lower than the climatological average from previous years (black line), due to an unusual amount of dry air in the atmosphere, inhibiting tropical storm development this year. Image credit: NOAA/CIRA.

Encounters with land will be another potential major problem for 97L. Most of the computer models take 97L near or over Puerto Rico Sunday night, then very close to or over mountainous Hispaniola Monday night through Tuesday. It is unlikely that 97L will be stronger than a 55 mph tropical storm when it encounters these islands, and passage over the islands could severely disrupt the storm. However, if 97L takes a path just south or north of Hispaniola, the potential exists for the storm to intensify into a hurricane.

There will be moderate wind shear of 10 - 20 knots to the north of the islands early next week, so a path just to the south of the Dominican Republic and Haiti would be more likely to let 97L intensify into a hurricane. A west-northwest motion is likely for 97L through Wednesday, which would bring the storm to the vicinity of Jamaica-Central Cuba-the Central Bahamas on Wednesday. On Wednesday and Thursday, the models agree that a trough of low pressure will dip down over the Eastern U.S., which is likely to turn 97L to the north. The exact timing and strength of this trough varies considerably from model to model, and will be critical in determining where and when 97L will turn to the north. The best model for predicting the timing and strength of such troughs over the past two years has been the ECMWF (European Center model), and this model currently brings 97L into the Florida Keys on Thursday night next week. You can view ECMWF forecasts on our wundermap with the model layer turned on. The European Center does not permit public display of tropical storm positions from their hurricane tracking module of their model, so we are unable to put ECMWF forecasts on our computer model forecast page that plots positions from the other major models.

Remember that a 7-day forecast by even our best model will be off by an average of over 700 miles, so it is too early to tell what part of the U.S. might be most at risk from a strike by 97L. This weekend would be a good time to go over your hurricane preparedness.


Figure 4. Morning satellite image of Invest 98L off the coast of Africa.

Invest 98L near the coast of Africa
A tropical wave near the coast of Africa, a few hundred miles southeast of the Cape Verde Islands, is moving west to west-northwestward at 10 - 15 mph. This wave, designated Invest 98L by NHC yesterday, is large and well-organized, with a modest amount of spin and heavy thunderstorm activity. 98L will bring strong, gusty winds and heavy rains to the Cape Verde Islands today and Saturday as the storm skirts to the south. So far this morning, top sustained winds measured in the islands were 24 mph at Mindelo. Water temperatures are warm, near 27 - 28°C, and wind shear is low, 5 - 10 knots, so 98L should continue to organize today. NHC gave the storm a 50% chance of developing into a tropical depression in their 8am advisory. Once 98L passes to the west of the Cape Verde Islands, it has a long stretch of ocean to cross before it could affect any other land areas. Approximately 70 - 80% of all tropical cyclones that pass this close to the Cape Verde Islands end up curving out to sea and not affecting any other land areas, according to Dr. Bob Hart's excellent historical probability of landfall charts. The latest set of long-range model runs go along with this idea, but it is too early to be confident of this.

Jeff Masters
Categories: Hurricane
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3601. HimacaneBrees 10:13 AM GMT on August 20, 2011    
Quoting AtHomeInTX:
Maybe I am having problems. Testing


you still working. But I'm not sure what's happening, it's definitely got some issues right now
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3602. GeoffreyWPB 10:13 AM GMT on August 20, 2011    
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3603. yesterway 10:14 AM GMT on August 20, 2011    
Quoting AtHomeInTX:


HEY! That didn't sound right. :p lol. I might have been offended if I didn't want to mention those models you just showed lookin' a little better for Florida. Lets hope they keep moving out.


I like your attitude :-)
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3604. smuldy 10:14 AM GMT on August 20, 2011    
Quoting seafarer459:


Simpletons? Ya just had to make it personal, didn't you?
:D
lol i just mean the people who cant read steering maps and dont understand the effect the mjo has and then declare what the outcome will be, questions are always a good thing and opinions are fine, and there are alot of people who know alot more than i do here take levi and kman as two prime examples, and many who know at least as much, just sometimes wading through the factually incorrect statements when i wake up in the afternoon makes it tough to bother coming back, all personal feelings about what happened last season to one of the best contributors here aside
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3605. BahaHurican 10:15 AM GMT on August 20, 2011    
Morning all...

Quoting yesterway:
What is this "just sayin'" and "All I'm sayin" stuff? Make your statement and stand by it. Let your yes be "yes" and your no "no".
LOL... hey yester... some of it is some old cusses trying to sound like young cusses... some of it is young cusses using slang... and some of it is just pple joking other people... lol

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3606. yesterway 10:16 AM GMT on August 20, 2011    
Quoting GeoffreyWPB:


Thanx for the nice animation GeoffreyWPB...
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3607. CybrTeddy 10:16 AM GMT on August 20, 2011    
Recon currently approaching Harvey, lets see what they find..
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3608. GeoffreyWPB 10:17 AM GMT on August 20, 2011    
Harvey looking very healthy.

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3609. yesterway 10:17 AM GMT on August 20, 2011    
Quoting BahaHurican:
Morning all...

LOL... hey yester... some of it is some old cusses trying to sound like young cusses... some of it is young cusses using slang... and some of it is just pple joking other people... lol



Good morning to you!
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3610. AtHomeInTX 10:18 AM GMT on August 20, 2011    
OH WAIT! I be shamed. Houston mentions it.

This is what my mother in law would have politely referred to as being "Snake Bit."

.FIRE...
ELEVATED FIRE WEATHER CONDITIONS EXPECTED TO PREVAIL INTO EARLY NEXT
WEEK. THE ISO TSRA CHANCES THE PAST COUPLE OF DAYS TO DECREASE A BIT
AS WE ARE NOT SEEING A LOT OF SHORTWAVE ACTIVITY HEADING THIS WAY IN
THE UPSTREAM FLOW. OTHERWISE THE MAIN ISSUES REMAIN THE AFTERNOON RH
VALUES WHICH ARE EXPECTED TO MIX OUT INTO THE 23-35 PERCENT RANGE IN
THE AFTN. HOWEVER WINDS SHOULD REMAIN ON THE LOW SIDE. VERY LIGHT W/
SWLY WINDS IN THE MORNING TO SHIFT TO THE SOUTH AND INCREASE TO NEAR
10 MPH DURING THE AFTN WITH THE PASSAGE OF THE SEABREEZE. LOOKING A-
HEAD...MODELS TAKING A POTENT TROPICAL SYSTEM INTO FL BY THE WEEKEND
OF THE 25TH. THIS PATTERN SHOULD SHIFT WINDS TO A MORE NORTHERLY DI-
RECTION ACROSS SE TX AND THE PROXIMITY OF THE CIRCULATION ASSOCIATED
WITH THE TROPICAL SYSTEM MAY BRING WINDS CLOSER TO 15 MPH BEFORE ALL
IS SAID AND DONE. STAY TUNED. 41
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3611. wxguesser 10:18 AM GMT on August 20, 2011    
Quoting AtHomeInTX:


One of our locals said there would be no cyclones in the gulf for the next month and a cold front was going to come through on September 10th bringing an early end to our hurricane season. Lol. Gotta love em.


Case in point :-)
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3612. WeatherNerdPR 10:18 AM GMT on August 20, 2011    
Quoting CybrTeddy:
Recon currently approaching Harvey, lets see what they find..


DVORAK Estimates rising again.
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3613. Chucktown 10:20 AM GMT on August 20, 2011    
Quoting smuldy:
many tv mets are hired for looks not brains, i doubt they know anything more about forecasting than the simplest simpletons who follow the lines here and play pin the tail on the donkey with the globals end result


Easy there, we're not all as dumb as we look...
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3614. smuldy 10:20 AM GMT on August 20, 2011    
Quoting AtHomeInTX:


I'm just cutting and pasting the facts, Sir. Lol.
lol not faulting what youre saying, just saying the GFS run the other day (think it was 18z if memory recalls) was an extreme outlier when it skirted up to new orleans and then showed it going into texas; given the synoptic pattern i can say that is more than extremely unlikely; this far out with no center formed no one can say where it will go for sure; but given steering and wind shear, and looking at the wv loop, and given the strength of the ridge over texas, its just not likely to be able to make it west of alabama; the weakness is forecast to be between there and the western extent of the AB high, and has been save that one outlier for 2 weeks now, so i wouldnt put much stock in that run; for me this setup says extreme eastern gulf to extreme western atlantic, unless it stays very weak and just heads west, which seems much less likely by the day
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3615. InTheCone 10:22 AM GMT on August 20, 2011    
06z GFS keeps 97l slightly further south which allows it to appear stronger as it makes the turn...

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3616. barotropic 10:22 AM GMT on August 20, 2011    
Quoting smuldy:
many tv mets are hired for looks not brains, i doubt they know anything more about forecasting than the simplest simpletons who follow the lines here and play pin the tail on the donkey with the globals end result


By the way....I understand your comment and you are in someways correct. But let me say something kinda funny. There is ALOT of pin the tale on the donkey that goes on at the TPC. I have been there and personally witnessed it many times at the TPC while visiting. As a matter of fact, "lets flip a coin" is not a rare comment there. The truth is a HUGE HUGE amount of weight is placed on models and consensus, significantly reducing the role of individual forecasting as years have gone by. The role of the forecaster is much greater in the very very near term track. So the guessing game on here is not far off than that at the hurricane center...so long as its in reasonable contrast to the models. Thats not to say they are never wrong, they are. But so are many many forecasts by some very intelligent people.
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3617. seafarer459 10:22 AM GMT on August 20, 2011    
@ Smuldy. I especially love the ones, who predict a whole season, based on the past weeks weather. Those who make the most, off the wall predictions, and then get offended when you call them on it. Still, it can make this blog as entertaining, as it is informative.
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3618. smuldy 10:23 AM GMT on August 20, 2011    
Quoting Chucktown:


Easy there, we're not all as dumb as we look...
unless youre a tv met, no offense intended again meant the crowd that breaks out here circa 5pm, and certainly not even most of them just a few loud ones, and if you are a tv met...apologies; but if you are that good looking and simultaneously not dumb you probably dont need my sorrow lol
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3619. AtHomeInTX 10:24 AM GMT on August 20, 2011    
Quoting smuldy:
lol not faulting what youre saying, just saying the GFS run the other day (think it was 18z if memory recalls) was an extreme outlier when it skirted up to new orleans and then showed it going into texas; given the synoptic pattern i can say that is more than extremely unlikely; this far out with no center formed no one can say where it will go for sure; but given steering and wind shear, and looking at the wv loop, and given the strength of the ridge over texas, its just not likely to be able to make it west of alabama; the weakness is forecast to be between there and the western extent of the AB high, and has been save that one outlier for 2 weeks now, so i wouldnt put much stock in that run; for me this setup says extreme eastern gulf to extreme western atlantic, unless it stays very weak and just heads west, which seems much less likely by the day


Yeah. Looks that way to me too. :)
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3620. MiamiHurricanes09 10:25 AM GMT on August 20, 2011    
Alright, my nap is complete. LOL. 06z GFS has another south Florida landfall with 97L.

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3621. InTheCone 10:25 AM GMT on August 20, 2011    
Whew....

06z GFS
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3623. whepton3 10:26 AM GMT on August 20, 2011    
Good Morning all..

Looking at that diagram from SFWMD.. I did notice one thing I thought was interesting..

BAMS has it S. of central Cuba then cuts it dearly due N. compared to the BAMM and BAMD.

Some shear between the low and mids at that point perhaps?

Seen that with a couple of the BAM suite runs.
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3624. MiamiHurricanes09 10:28 AM GMT on August 20, 2011    
Quoting InTheCone:
Whew....

06z GFS
Do you live in south Florida too?
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3625. whepton3 10:28 AM GMT on August 20, 2011    
Quoting MiamiHurricanes09:
Alright, my nap is complete. LOL. 06z GFS has another south Florida landfall with 97L.



what does it have as a pressure there? 996mb? Or did I see the first outer ring?

Still a long way off... intensity progs are for entertainment purposes only at this point... but still is interesting.
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3626. clwstmchasr 10:29 AM GMT on August 20, 2011    
Quoting weatherjr:
I do not expect much from the Invest 97. It is rather weak and weakening.


Wow, up early to bring value to this blog. Nice.
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3627. InTheCone 10:29 AM GMT on August 20, 2011    
Quoting MiamiHurricanes09:
Do you live in south Florida too?


Yes, West Palm Area and I am beginning to get VERY interested in this system!
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3628. BahaHurican 10:29 AM GMT on August 20, 2011    
Quoting EastTexJake:
I think things have just slowed down on the blog.
Nah, just normal shift change time... lol

Quoting barotropic:


LOL "simplest simpletons". Thats not a nice way to refer to fellow bloggers, now is it? LOL...
I thought she was referencing the trolls... lol

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3629. smuldy 10:30 AM GMT on August 20, 2011    
Quoting barotropic:


\The role of the forecaster is much greater in the very very near term track. So the guessing game on here is not far off than that at the hurricane center...so long as its in reasonable contrast to the models. Thats not to say they are never wrong, they are. But so are many many forecasts by some very intelligent people.
+100, especially with an unformed storm any track is low confidence
Quoting seafarer459:
@ Smuldy. I especially love the ones, who predict a whole season, based on the past weeks weather. Those who make the most, off the wall predictions, and then get offended when you call them on it.
It can, but I know on the spot i post at I try to temper what i think may happen because i worry for those who really don't know and are looking for informed opinion about what might come to be, and for instance just because i think that the likelihood of a storm hitting Alabama is not high right now, it doesn't mean it would take much for me to be wrong that far out, so that is where the uninformed can cause trouble if they are taken seriously by the wrong people.

Anyway, 6z GFS time since I have waited up to post my take on it at my 'home', but please anyone in the Eastern Gomex and to the Bahamas keep an eye out, and listen to the many well informed bloggers you are lucky to have here, they can give you great insight into what is likely to unfold.
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3630. MiamiHurricanes09 10:30 AM GMT on August 20, 2011    
Quoting whepton3:


what does it have as a pressure there? 996mb? Or did I see the first outer ring?

Still a long way off... intensity progs are for entertainment purposes only at this point... but still is interesting.
988mb, but continues to intensify slightly as it moves northward. Probably a category 2 cyclone being depicted. Nevertheless, like you said, intensity forecasts are almost useless with the system that has yet to develop.
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3631. WeatherNerdPR 10:31 AM GMT on August 20, 2011    
Belize Radar
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3632. smuldy 10:32 AM GMT on August 20, 2011    
Quoting BahaHurican:
Nah, just normal shift change time... lol

I thought she was referencing the trolls... lol

lol i was but its not she its he, Sean, so if my analogous hurricane happens to hit the Bahamas this year i swear i had nothing to do with it lol
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3633. InTheCone 10:32 AM GMT on August 20, 2011    
Two most reliable models, very good consensus, have to watch this one closely here in FL.!!


Euro 168.....



GFS 144...

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3634. BoroDad17 10:32 AM GMT on August 20, 2011    
Well a sharper north turn is good for me in Savannah, can't have a hurricane make initial landfall in savannah going straight north, FL will block (sorry FL). I am definitely more worried about an Eastern Gulf path with landfall near Apalachicola. Would rake the entire W coast of florida with the E side of the storm, and have an extra 36 hours over the hot GOM, and given the setup, would probably pass right over my house.
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3635. MiamiHurricanes09 10:33 AM GMT on August 20, 2011    
Quoting InTheCone:


Yes, West Palm Area and I am beginning to get VERY interested in this system!
Heh, you're not alone. Been cutting my sleep in half during the last few days of summer following this system. Obviously nothing to get worried about at this stage in the game, but when reliable global models consistently have a hurricane on your doorstep in 5-7 days, it's something that's definitely worth paying close attention to.
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3636. BahaHurican 10:33 AM GMT on August 20, 2011    
Pulling this image was really weird, because the NASA site has yesterday morning's image up on the main page, so you have to "guestimate" where to centre the image ....

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3637. Chucktown 10:33 AM GMT on August 20, 2011    
Quoting smuldy:
unless youre a tv met, no offense intended again meant the crowd that breaks out here circa 5pm, and certainly not even most of them just a few loud ones, and if you are a tv met...apologies; but if you are that good looking and simultaneously not dumb you probably dont need my sorrow lol


Hurricanes and tropical forecasting when it comes to TV is not fun. While of course you want to get the word out about the potential impacts of an impending system, you also don't want to create a sense of panic. A hurricane can make or break a TV station, so a lot of TV mets like myself have to take the high road on these scenarios until we are fairly certain of some kind of impact. It doesn't mean that we don't want to get information to the public about what could happen next week, we've been preparing our viewers for this since mid-May.
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3638. whepton3 10:34 AM GMT on August 20, 2011    
Quoting MiamiHurricanes09:
Heh, you're not alone. Been cutting my sleep in half during the last few days of summer following this system. Obviously nothing to get worried about at this stage in the game, but when reliable global models consistently have a hurricane on your doorstep in 5-7 days, it's something that's definitely worth paying close attention to.


I'm in that club folks... in Boca Raton... so I've been watching for a week now... starting to look like an interesting week possibly.
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3639. BahaHurican 10:34 AM GMT on August 20, 2011    
Woweee... look at Harvey.... dunno if it'll get all the way to hurricane, but it's looking darn good.
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3640. InTheCone 10:35 AM GMT on August 20, 2011    
Quoting MiamiHurricanes09:
Heh, you're not alone. Been cutting my sleep in half during the last few days of summer following this system. Obviously nothing to get worried about at this stage in the game, but when reliable global models consistently have a hurricane on your doorstep in 5-7 days, it's something that's definitely worth paying close attention to.


Yep, I am already making preliminary plans for my prep next week, should it become necessary. Always good to be ahead of the curve.
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3641. smuldy 10:36 AM GMT on August 20, 2011    
6z takes it into SFL again, figured I'd post it here too since I've been talking so much waiting for it; heads a tic east of 0z if any trend is to be deciphered, but this far out only look at it as a possible outcome cause that is all it is yet
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3642. whepton3 10:36 AM GMT on August 20, 2011    
Quoting MiamiHurricanes09:
988mb, but continues to intensify slightly as it moves northward. Probably a category 2 cyclone being depicted. Nevertheless, like you said, intensity forecasts are almost useless with the system that has yet to develop.


I've done a cursory look for this in a couple of places... but is there a quick reference for translating mb to inches... or maybe a formula?
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3643. AtHomeInTX 10:36 AM GMT on August 20, 2011    
Quoting MiamiHurricanes09:
Alright, my nap is complete. LOL. 06z GFS has another south Florida landfall with 97L.



Oh wow. Glad we have a fresh, well rested brain here this morning. I been up all night and forgot the 6z Run. Of course I seem to forget a lot of things lately. Hmmm?
Lol. Thanks MH9! :)
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3644. BahaHurican 10:37 AM GMT on August 20, 2011    
Quoting Chucktown:


Easy there, we're not all as dumb as we look...
Hey, Chuck, the "many" obviously doesn't include u.... lol
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3645. WeatherNerdPR 10:38 AM GMT on August 20, 2011    
Quoting BahaHurican:
Woweee... look at Harvey.... dunno if it'll get all the way to hurricane, but it's looking darn good.

Yeah. Waiting on visible.
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3647. MiamiHurricanes09 10:38 AM GMT on August 20, 2011    
Quoting whepton3:


I've done a cursory look for this in a couple of places... but is there a quick reference for translating mb to inches... or maybe a formula?
To convert inches of mercury to millibars, multiply the inches value by 33.8637526
To convert millibars to inches of mercury, multiply the millibar value by 0.0295301.

Or just bookmark this.

Quoting AtHomeInTX:


Oh wow. Glad we have a fresh, well rested brain here this morning. I been up all night and forgot the 6z Run. Of course I seem to forget a lot of things lately. Hmmm?
Lol. Thanks MH9! :)
LOL, not really restarted, just slept 45 minutes, but just enough to keep me going until at least 8a.m lol.
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3648. smuldy 10:38 AM GMT on August 20, 2011    
Quoting Chucktown:


Hurricanes and tropical forecasting when it comes to TV is not fun. While of course you want to get the word out about the potential impacts of an impending system, you also don't want to create a sense of panic. A hurricane can make or break a TV station, so a lot of TV mets like myself have to take the high road on these scenarios until we are fairly certain of some kind of impact. It doesn't mean that we don't want to get information to the public about what could happen next week, we've been preparing our viewers for this since mid-May.
fair enough; try to do the same temperance with my posts as well given the whole boy who cried wolf story, was more just taking a shot at great looking people, so if you're a tv met take it as a compliment, industry has come a long way since Dave Letterman was breaking through in (i think) Indiana. Not knocking Dave though guy is genius.
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3649. WxLogic 10:39 AM GMT on August 20, 2011    
Good Morning...

Got to sleep early yesterday so missed the 00Z and 06Z runs but got caught up just now. All I can say is wow...
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3650. InTheCone 10:39 AM GMT on August 20, 2011    
Quoting AtHomeInTX:


Oh wow. Glad we have a fresh, well rested brain here this morning. I been up all night and forgot the 6z Run. Of course I seem to forget a lot of things lately. Hmmm?
Lol. Thanks MH9! :)


Do you ever sleep? You're always here - LOL! I usually just lurk when it's really busy on here, no need to repeat all the stuff that gets posted.
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3651. barotropic 10:40 AM GMT on August 20, 2011    
I think Smuddy is right on the area for the most potential threat. At this point it seems the corridor between the SE and central Bahamas west to the extreme eastern gulf is the area that seems to be potentially under the gun. Of course its still to early to say with any confidence but most of the reliable models seem to be persistent with this for over five days now. Thats pretty significant. Of course intensity is a factor that is even harder to figure.
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About JeffMasters
Jeff co-founded the Weather Underground in 1995 while working on his Ph.D. He flew with the NOAA Hurricane Hunters from 1986-1990.

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