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sci.geo.meteorology (Meteorology) (sci.geo.meteorology) For the discussion of meteorology and related topics. |
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#11
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On Tue, 31 Aug 2004 11:36:59 -0500,
Mike1 , in wrote: + the keys. ....I'm actually wondering: How do we keep it off of *Cuba*? Fidel goes out and huffs and puffs at it? James -- Consulting Minister for Consultants, DNRC I can please only one person per day. Today is not your day. Tomorrow isn't looking good, either. I am BOFH. Resistance is futile. Your network will be assimilated. |
#12
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#13
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I live in Charleston, South Carolina. What are the chances of Frances
taking a hurricane Hugo track? AminoSC wrote in message . .. In past years, this board would already have been full of posts from that Schneider guy predicting doom after watching satellite loops till 3 am. A hurricane without Scheider is like X-mas without Santa Claus. Tell me his spirit hasn't been broken by too many near misses and last-second turn-offs to sea. Besides Scheider, there would have been several spirited discussions from knowledgeable folks. Isn't there anyone on Usenet who likes to talk hurricances? Jason |
#14
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![]() "AminoSC" wrote in message ... I live in Charleston, South Carolina. What are the chances of Frances taking a hurricane Hugo track? A couple of the models have it doing that, according to the 11 pm update. Most have it hitting Florida, though. Jason |
#15
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On Tue, 31 Aug 2004 21:53:17 -0500, wrote:
"AminoSC" wrote in message ... I live in Charleston, South Carolina. What are the chances of Frances taking a hurricane Hugo track? A couple of the models have it doing that, according to the 11 pm update. Most have it hitting Florida, though. Jason The upper level flow still looks pretty zonal meaning systems north of 30N are moving east and systems south of 30 north are moving west across the gulf. I think the models that have Frances turning north are relying on the coriolis effect overcoming the steering from a high pressure ridge. The official forecast keeps moving the track farther and farther south so everybody needs to check the weather forecast frequently. If you live in south Florida you might only have one day to shop and prepare once the media starts sounding the alarm. |
#16
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Date: Mon, 30 Aug 2004 22:42:39 -0500
Newsgroup: sci.geo.meteorology Subject: Where's all the Hurricance Frances talk? Schneider? I wrote: Watch the WV and keep an eye on the trough presently running from the Gulf up the Ohio River into the northeast US; if you see the Gulf/lower-states portion begin to retrograde west as Frances approaches -- watch out! -- because that means the in-tandem Omega pattern is setting up to enable Frances to continue chugging W/WNW (where the likely track would be across Florida toward a second strike in the north-central Gulf). Now hear this: HURRICANE FRANCES DISCUSSION NUMBER 33 11 PM EDT WED SEP 01 2004 snip SONDE DATA HAS PRODUCED SOME INTERESTING AND DISTURBING RESULTS. THE HEIGHT DATA FOR THE VARIOUS PRESSURE LEVELS...COMPARED TO 18Z SURROUNDING UPPER-AIR DATA...APPEAR TO BE AT LEAST 20 METERS TOO LOW. snip The 00Z NOGAPS and EMC (the only two models out as I write) are now shifting the projected track to the left -- both move Frances across southern Florida into the Gulf of Mexico, and have it over waters there sufficient time for it to completely regain strength prior to second landfall. http://met.psu.edu/tropical/tcgengifs/ https://www.fnmoc.navy.mil/PUBLIC/WXMAP/index.html -- Reply to sans two @@, or your reply won't reach me. Twin City Strategy Gamer: http://groups.yahoo.com/group/TC_Strategy/ Drug smugglers and gun-runners are heroes of American capitalism. -- Jeffrey Quick |
#17
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![]() "Mike1" wrote in message ... Date: Mon, 30 Aug 2004 22:42:39 -0500 Newsgroup: sci.geo.meteorology Subject: Where's all the Hurricance Frances talk? Schneider? I wrote: Watch the WV and keep an eye on the trough presently running from the Gulf up the Ohio River into the northeast US; if you see the Gulf/lower-states portion begin to retrograde west as Frances approaches -- watch out! -- because that means the in-tandem Omega pattern is setting up to enable Frances to continue chugging W/WNW (where the likely track would be across Florida toward a second strike in the north-central Gulf). Now hear this: HURRICANE FRANCES DISCUSSION NUMBER 33 11 PM EDT WED SEP 01 2004 snip SONDE DATA HAS PRODUCED SOME INTERESTING AND DISTURBING RESULTS. THE HEIGHT DATA FOR THE VARIOUS PRESSURE LEVELS...COMPARED TO 18Z SURROUNDING UPPER-AIR DATA...APPEAR TO BE AT LEAST 20 METERS TOO LOW. snip The 00Z NOGAPS and EMC (the only two models out as I write) are now shifting the projected track to the left -- both move Frances across southern Florida into the Gulf of Mexico, and have it over waters there sufficient time for it to completely regain strength prior to second landfall. That is a bold call man, a bold call indeed. I'm going to stick with the path that takes Frances right up through central Florida into southern Georgia where it will become just another blob on the radar. |
#18
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WV backing to about PCOLA as of 8:30 AM THURSDAY
-- Don SEMPER VIGILS It's your God-given right to sit on your back porch and eat Chinese takeout by candlelight in your underwear. http://www.angelfire.com/ms2/paswx REAL TIME OBS PAGE http://www.jcmsara.org. Jackson County Ms Club Page "Mike1" wrote in message ... wrote: In past years, this board would already have been full of posts from that Schneider guy predicting doom after watching satellite loops till 3 am. A hurricane without Scheider is like X-mas without Santa Claus.... Santa, eh? Hardly.... Blofeld's hypnotic voice, in "On Her Majesty's 'Secret Service'" "Now, take out your present. Such a prettily-wrapped present. Now is the time to open it....." /Blofeld - - - After yesterday's shearing environment resulted in a contraction of windfield and eyewall tightening, Frances is now moving almost due west under a nearly perfect outflow environment, and picked up speed as it is being scooted along by a deep-layer surge (visible on WV) from the east. The hurricane's windfield will begin to expand, and the current tiny eyewall ring will be will be replaced by a much larger Isabel/Mitch eye. The hurricane will then be able to process greater volumes of air, and should quickly intensity to a very strong cat-4 or cat-5 sometime tomorrow and maintain that higher intensity until it either strikes land or recurvature begins (since recurvature is usually accompanied by southwesterly shear). The NHC is presently concerned that previously model-hinted recurvature (with weakening) into the Carolines (your basic, seen-it-before, "Floyd gets sheared, pukes out, and spares everyone" track) may not happen at all..... In the past, I have noticed that large and energetic* hurricanes with very expansive exhaust canopies can strengthen and "warp" the high pressure regions around them to accomadate their existence; the stronger high, in turn, has additional "muscle" to bulldoze pesky jet-streams at far peripheries. Sometimes seen with west-Pac storms and rarely in the Atlantic, on WV satellite this assumes the appearance of a westward- moving hurricane preceded by a forward "bow-shock" (of high cirrus) and trailing an exhaust "rat-tail" to the east (as if it were a curling wave) with a standing-wave "Omega Block" north of it retrograding in tandem. Frances is not yet so large or energetic a storm, although it is, presently, bigger than Georges was in this vacinity (which accounts for it weathering the similar shearing episode better despite being weaker); she does, however, presently lack a large constellation of feeder-bands, so she's obviously not processing as much atmosphere as, say, Gilbert or Georges. Should Frances become so large, don't be surprised to see a very stubborn track break recurve models one after the other, much as both Gilbert and Georges both did. Watch the WV, and keep an eye on the trough presently running from the Gulf up the Ohio River into the northeast US; if you see the Gulf/lower-states portion begin to retrograde west as Frances approaches -- watch out! -- because that means the in-tandem Omega pattern is setting up to enable Frances to continue chugging W/WNW (where the likely track would be across Florida toward a second strike in the north-central Gulf. (*I use "energetic" as a euphemism for "highly convective", not "with high wind speeds". A broad cat-3 with a gigantic exhaust canopy is more capable of modifying the surrounding environment than an intense but tiny hurricane like Charley. Georges, for example, remained highly energetic even the its surface-level windfield was shredded by the Greater Antilles.) "Bublee-bublee....that's all, Folks!" -- Reply to sans two @@, or your reply won't reach me. Twin City Strategy Gamer: http://groups.yahoo.com/group/TC_Strategy/ Drug smugglers and gun-runners are heroes of American capitalism. -- Jeffrey Quick --- Outgoing mail is certified Virus Free. Checked by AVG anti-virus system (http://www.grisoft.com). Version: 6.0.749 / Virus Database: 501 - Release Date: 9/1/2004 |
#19
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Mr. Poopy Pants wrote:
"Mike1" wrote in message ... Date: Mon, 30 Aug 2004 22:42:39 -0500 Newsgroup: sci.geo.meteorology Subject: Where's all the Hurricance Frances talk? Schneider? I wrote: Watch the WV and keep an eye on the trough presently running from the Gulf up the Ohio River into the northeast US; if you see the Gulf/lower-states portion begin to retrograde west as Frances approaches -- watch out! -- because that means the in-tandem Omega pattern is setting up to enable Frances to continue chugging W/WNW (where the likely track would be across Florida toward a second strike in the north-central Gulf). Now hear this: HURRICANE FRANCES DISCUSSION NUMBER 33 11 PM EDT WED SEP 01 2004 snip SONDE DATA HAS PRODUCED SOME INTERESTING AND DISTURBING RESULTS. THE HEIGHT DATA FOR THE VARIOUS PRESSURE LEVELS...COMPARED TO 18Z SURROUNDING UPPER-AIR DATA...APPEAR TO BE AT LEAST 20 METERS TOO LOW. snip The 00Z NOGAPS and EMC (the only two models out as I write) are now shifting the projected track to the left -- both move Frances across southern Florida into the Gulf of Mexico, and have it over waters there sufficient time for it to completely regain strength prior to second landfall. That is a bold call man, a bold call indeed. I'm going to stick with the path that takes Frances right up through central Florida into southern Georgia where it will become just another blob on the radar. I don't know how bold it is. It is consistent with d(prog)/dt, which is sometimes a pretty good forecast tool. And it's consistent with Mike's climatology ![]() I'm not sure how shear-free the environment will be over the GufMex should Frances emerge into it. I certainly wouldn't be stunned, though, if Frances hit, say, the Big Easy. The question is -- would it be like Andrew (a mere shadow of its former self) or Betsy (still just as strong). Sure is a pretty storm from space. Scott |
#20
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There is a lot of filth and bottom-feeders walking around on two legs that
need to be washed away in the devastation that this hurricane is bringing with it. I'm going to predict (and hope for) landfall in the extremely populated Jacksonville area, where it will do the most damage. Cheap disaster brings a hearty twinkle to the eye! Laughing when the very young and weak are doomed to die! When tragedy is near, we like to clap and cheer! All those who think they're brave will find us ****ing on their graves! |
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