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Started By
Message
re: Hurricane Irma - Spinning Down
Posted on 9/5/17 at 9:41 am to theronswanson
Posted on 9/5/17 at 9:41 am to theronswanson
my buddy in Tampa said Publix was out of water and Home Depot was out of plywood already
Posted on 9/5/17 at 9:41 am to rt3
This storm shows a large hurricane Force wind field. Like 100-120 miles end to end.
Just reading the kt readings from AF309.
Just reading the kt readings from AF309.
Posted on 9/5/17 at 9:42 am to slackster
quote:
You'll often see strong bands immediately outside of the eye wall. Sometimes those bands wrap all the way around and will close off the inner eye wall, choking it's access to moist air. The inner eye wall weakens, and eventually gets replaced as the outer band contracts. During that cycle, you're weakening the part of the storm with the strongest winds, so the intensity dips accordingly.
After the cycle you'll usually see am expansion of the wind field, provided the storm has enough time and favorable circumstances.
Thanks for that. Learning as well here.
Posted on 9/5/17 at 9:43 am to notiger1997
quote:
I know it's not a Nola type situation, but I don't know the lay out and topography of that city
Miami is 6.5 feet above sea level. Wouldn't take a lot of storm surge for it to become inundated.
This post was edited on 9/5/17 at 9:47 am
Posted on 9/5/17 at 9:43 am to rt3
quote:
also... don't see how they're playing the Bucs/Dolphins game in Miami on Sunday
Yeah, they are meeting this morning to discuss options. My guess is that it will be moved up to Thursday or moved to a different city.
Posted on 9/5/17 at 9:44 am to 50_Tiger
quote:
a large hurricane Force wind field. Like 100-120 miles end to end.
how much of the 120 miles is the Major Hurricane field?
Posted on 9/5/17 at 9:44 am to rt3
quote:
also... don't see how they're playing the Bucs/Dolphins game in Miami on Sunday
I cant imagine that would happen but you would think they will wait as long as they can to call the 25 fans coming and reschedule.
Posted on 9/5/17 at 9:44 am to RollDatRoll
quote:
Yeah, they are meeting this morning to discuss options. My guess is that it will be moved up to Thursday or moved to a different city.
Superdome's open
and it just hosted a displaced game
Posted on 9/5/17 at 9:44 am to DawgCountry
Got damn. I am gonna head out and run some errands here soon. Gonna have to stop by and see I can find some water.
Posted on 9/5/17 at 9:45 am to PhillipJFry
sticky this motherfricker
Posted on 9/5/17 at 9:46 am to Pedro
quote:
Speed plays a huge huge roll. A slower storm is gonna have more time to push water where a speedier storm isn't gonna push as much.
Thanks for the assist.
The slower storm putting wind across the water for a longer period of time provides more overall force to build up greater momentum in the coming surge? I'm guessing that's the idea here.
Posted on 9/5/17 at 9:46 am to Chad504boy
96 knots and higher seems to be a bit smaller.
This post was edited on 9/5/17 at 9:47 am
Posted on 9/5/17 at 9:47 am to 50_Tiger
...POTENTIALLY CATASTROPHIC CATEGORY 5 HURRICANE IRMA HEADING TOWARD THE LEEWARD ISLANDS... ...PREPARATIONS SHOULD BE RUSHED TO COMPLETION IN THE HURRICANE WARNING AREA...
11:00 AM AST Tue Sep 5
Location: 16.8°N 58.4°W
Moving: W at 14 mph
Min pressure: 931 mb
Max sustained: 180 mph
11:00 AM AST Tue Sep 5
Location: 16.8°N 58.4°W
Moving: W at 14 mph
Min pressure: 931 mb
Max sustained: 180 mph
This post was edited on 9/5/17 at 9:49 am
Posted on 9/5/17 at 9:49 am to rt3
Yep. The powers that be in the NFL have reached out to the super dome to discuss playing the game there
Posted on 9/5/17 at 9:49 am to lsuman25
Storm's still moving due west?
Posted on 9/5/17 at 9:50 am to theunknownknight
Models tracked farther west the last 12 hours.
Tampa may be fricked.
Tampa may be fricked.
Posted on 9/5/17 at 9:51 am to LSUAlum2001
every time i read the W word, i want to punch a kitten.
Posted on 9/5/17 at 9:51 am to theunknownknight
000
WTNT41 KNHC 051446
TCDAT1
Hurricane Irma Discussion Number 26
NWS National Hurricane Center Miami FL AL112017
1100 AM AST Tue Sep 05 2017
Irma is an extremely impressive hurricane in both infrared and
visible satellite images. Experimental GOES-16 one-minute visible
satellite pictures show a distinct 25-30 n mi wide eye with several
mesovortices rotating within with eye. The aircraft have not
sampled the northeastern eyewall where the strongest winds were
measured shortly before 1200 UTC this morning, but the Air Force
plane will be entering the eye in that quadrant momentarily. A peak
SFMR wind of 154 kt was reported, with a few others of 149-150 kt.
Based on these data the initial intensity is set at 155 kt for this
advisory. This makes Irma the strongest hurricane in the Atlantic
basin outside of the Caribbean Sea and Gulf of Mexico in the NHC
records.
Irma is expected to remain within low vertical wind shear, a moist
mid-level atmosphere, and high upper-ocean heat content as it moves
west-northwestward during the next several days. These conditions
should allow the hurricane to remain very intense throughout much
of the forecast period, however, fluctuations in intensity are
likely to occur as eyewall replacement cycles take place. The NHC
intensity forecast is near the upper-end of the guidance and assumes
little overall interaction of Irma with the islands of the Greater
Antilles.
Irma continues to move westward at about 12 kt, and a strong
subtropical ridge centered over the central Atlantic should steer
Irma generally westward today. The ridge is expected to remain in
place over the western Atlantic during the next several days and
Irma is forecast to move west-northwestward throughout the most of
remainder of the forecast period. Around day 5, a shortwave trough
dropping southward over the central United States is expected to
begin eroding the western portion of the ridge, allowing a Irma to
gain some latitude. The new NHC track forecast is close to the
HFIP corrected consensus model and is very similar to the previous
forecast.
Since Irma is a large hurricane, users are reminded to not focus on
the exact forecast track since tropical-storm and hurricane-force
winds and life-threatening storm surge extend far from the center.
Residents in the Leeward Islands should complete their preparations
very soon as the weather will begin to deteriorate over the
easternmost Leeward Islands later this afternoon.
KEY MESSAGES:
1. Irma is a potentially catastrophic category 5 hurricane and will
bring life-threatening wind, storm surge, and rainfall hazards to
portions of the northeastern Leeward Islands beginning later today
and the Virgin Islands and Puerto Rico beginning tomorrow.
Preparations should be rushed to completion before the arrival of
tropical-storm force winds later today in the Leeward Islands and
tomorrow morning in Virgin Islands and Puerto Rico.
2. Hurricane watches have been issued for portions of the Dominican
Republic and Haiti, the southeastern Bahamas and Turks and Caicos,
and Irma could bring dangerous wind, storm surge, and rainfall to
those areas on Thursday and Friday.
3. Irma could directly affect the remainder of the Bahamas and Cuba
as an extremely dangerous major hurricane later this week. Residents
in these areas should monitor the progress of Irma and listen to
advice given by officials.
4. The chance of direct impacts from Irma later this week and this
weekend is increasing in the Florida Keys and portions of the
Florida Peninsula. However, it is too soon to specify the timing
and magnitude of the impacts. Elsewhere, it is too early to
determine what direct impacts Irma might have on the continental
United States. Everyone in hurricane-prone areas should ensure that
they have their hurricane plan in place.
FORECAST POSITIONS AND MAX WINDS
INIT 05/1500Z 16.8N 58.4W 155 KT 180 MPH
12H 06/0000Z 17.2N 60.3W 155 KT 180 MPH
24H 06/1200Z 18.1N 63.0W 150 KT 175 MPH
36H 07/0000Z 19.1N 65.9W 145 KT 165 MPH
48H 07/1200Z 20.1N 68.7W 140 KT 160 MPH
72H 08/1200Z 21.4N 74.0W 135 KT 155 MPH
96H 09/1200Z 22.7N 78.3W 130 KT 150 MPH
120H 10/1200Z 24.4N 81.2W 125 KT 145 MPH
$$
Forecaster Brown
WTNT41 KNHC 051446
TCDAT1
Hurricane Irma Discussion Number 26
NWS National Hurricane Center Miami FL AL112017
1100 AM AST Tue Sep 05 2017
Irma is an extremely impressive hurricane in both infrared and
visible satellite images. Experimental GOES-16 one-minute visible
satellite pictures show a distinct 25-30 n mi wide eye with several
mesovortices rotating within with eye. The aircraft have not
sampled the northeastern eyewall where the strongest winds were
measured shortly before 1200 UTC this morning, but the Air Force
plane will be entering the eye in that quadrant momentarily. A peak
SFMR wind of 154 kt was reported, with a few others of 149-150 kt.
Based on these data the initial intensity is set at 155 kt for this
advisory. This makes Irma the strongest hurricane in the Atlantic
basin outside of the Caribbean Sea and Gulf of Mexico in the NHC
records.
Irma is expected to remain within low vertical wind shear, a moist
mid-level atmosphere, and high upper-ocean heat content as it moves
west-northwestward during the next several days. These conditions
should allow the hurricane to remain very intense throughout much
of the forecast period, however, fluctuations in intensity are
likely to occur as eyewall replacement cycles take place. The NHC
intensity forecast is near the upper-end of the guidance and assumes
little overall interaction of Irma with the islands of the Greater
Antilles.
Irma continues to move westward at about 12 kt, and a strong
subtropical ridge centered over the central Atlantic should steer
Irma generally westward today. The ridge is expected to remain in
place over the western Atlantic during the next several days and
Irma is forecast to move west-northwestward throughout the most of
remainder of the forecast period. Around day 5, a shortwave trough
dropping southward over the central United States is expected to
begin eroding the western portion of the ridge, allowing a Irma to
gain some latitude. The new NHC track forecast is close to the
HFIP corrected consensus model and is very similar to the previous
forecast.
Since Irma is a large hurricane, users are reminded to not focus on
the exact forecast track since tropical-storm and hurricane-force
winds and life-threatening storm surge extend far from the center.
Residents in the Leeward Islands should complete their preparations
very soon as the weather will begin to deteriorate over the
easternmost Leeward Islands later this afternoon.
KEY MESSAGES:
1. Irma is a potentially catastrophic category 5 hurricane and will
bring life-threatening wind, storm surge, and rainfall hazards to
portions of the northeastern Leeward Islands beginning later today
and the Virgin Islands and Puerto Rico beginning tomorrow.
Preparations should be rushed to completion before the arrival of
tropical-storm force winds later today in the Leeward Islands and
tomorrow morning in Virgin Islands and Puerto Rico.
2. Hurricane watches have been issued for portions of the Dominican
Republic and Haiti, the southeastern Bahamas and Turks and Caicos,
and Irma could bring dangerous wind, storm surge, and rainfall to
those areas on Thursday and Friday.
3. Irma could directly affect the remainder of the Bahamas and Cuba
as an extremely dangerous major hurricane later this week. Residents
in these areas should monitor the progress of Irma and listen to
advice given by officials.
4. The chance of direct impacts from Irma later this week and this
weekend is increasing in the Florida Keys and portions of the
Florida Peninsula. However, it is too soon to specify the timing
and magnitude of the impacts. Elsewhere, it is too early to
determine what direct impacts Irma might have on the continental
United States. Everyone in hurricane-prone areas should ensure that
they have their hurricane plan in place.
FORECAST POSITIONS AND MAX WINDS
INIT 05/1500Z 16.8N 58.4W 155 KT 180 MPH
12H 06/0000Z 17.2N 60.3W 155 KT 180 MPH
24H 06/1200Z 18.1N 63.0W 150 KT 175 MPH
36H 07/0000Z 19.1N 65.9W 145 KT 165 MPH
48H 07/1200Z 20.1N 68.7W 140 KT 160 MPH
72H 08/1200Z 21.4N 74.0W 135 KT 155 MPH
96H 09/1200Z 22.7N 78.3W 130 KT 150 MPH
120H 10/1200Z 24.4N 81.2W 125 KT 145 MPH
$$
Forecaster Brown
Posted on 9/5/17 at 9:52 am to Chad504boy
Yeah, me too.
Turn up the east coast and spin off into the Northern Atlantic.
Turn up the east coast and spin off into the Northern Atlantic.
Posted on 9/5/17 at 9:52 am to LSUAlum2001
It doesn't take much more than a thunderstorm for South Tampa to flood as it is - can't imagine what a hurricane will do.
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