Jump to content
  • Member Statistics

    17,507
    Total Members
    7,904
    Most Online
    SnowHabit
    Newest Member
    SnowHabit
    Joined

Tropical Storm Jose


NortheastPAWx

Recommended Posts

Most notable to me is the euro and gfs continue to correct further south and west with Jose's track through 72 hrs. The trend has been for about 4 consecutive runs already...

If this trend continues with a ~150 mile shift further W/SW the chances of a direct hit in the MA/NE either as a result of a block/retrograde evolution or recurve NNE/NE following a trough interaction greatly increases from a current low probability.

The west most tracks per the NHC's latest cone certainly imply Jose bears close watching based on the various H500 outcomes we have seen thus far on guidance beyond day 5.

http://www.nhc.noaa.gov/graphics_at2.shtml?cone#contents

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • Replies 861
  • Created
  • Last Reply
1 hour ago, jbenedet said:

6z GEFS with another shift west. Quite a few members are packed closely to the coast, and the mean takes the center close to the BM. Tracks him due north until he's about 200 miles south of MTK, and then sends him ENE ots.

Two of the tropical models see something similar with an approach to the coastline at 120 hours.

It seems Jose is a surfer's dream with nice rollers when conditions are just right.  Nothing destructive though and an eventual

OTS finale.

 

hmon-full.jpg

hwrf.jpg

Link to comment
Share on other sites

11 minutes ago, winterymix said:

Two of the tropical models see something similar with an approach to the coastline at 120 hours.

It seems Jose is a surfer's dream with nice rollers when conditions are just right.  Nothing destructive though and an eventual

OTS finale.

 

hmon-full.jpg

hwrf.jpg

That is certainly the consensus at this point. But that trough interaction is 6 days out. So the hard recurve ots is the most uncertain aspect of this forecast right now.

It's conceivable we see the trough dig further/faster, on future guidance, yielding more interaction to pull him N/NNE as opposed to ENE.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

1 hour ago, jbenedet said:

6z GEFS with another shift west. Quite a few members are packed closely to the coast, and the mean takes the center close to the BM. Tracks him due north until he's about 200 miles south of MTK, and then sends him ENE ots.

Looks like three main camps, one quick and OTS, a second camp that retrogrades back towards the coast and a third slower camp that still has Jose meandering around 240hr+.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

16 minutes ago, jbenedet said:

That is certainly the consensus at this point. But that trough interaction is 6 days out. So the hard recurve ots is the most uncertain aspect of this forecast right now.

It's conceivable we see the trough dig further/faster, on future guidance, yielding more interaction to pull him N/NNE as opposed to ENE.

Degree of typhoon recurve might have implications there.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

1 minute ago, Akeem the African Dream said:

not with the way it is moving

these storms always look like **** once they get far enough north .  those waters killed sandy

Only because Sandy stalled for a few hours off the coast.  It was close to being a Cat 2 off the NJ coast before it stalled for a few hours (ironically the stall actually made it hit at high tide, so the impact might have been worse even though it was weaker when it made landfall.)  And it still hit with 90-95 mph wind gusts.  This storm is no Sandy but if it hit the coast at a high speed it wouldn't weaken much- the problem is it's weak to begin with.

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

1 minute ago, WinterWolf said:

You mean how Jupiter got it's spot.

lol they both have their "spots" it's just that Jupiter's are far easier to distinguish because of their color (especially that big one, the GRS, which is the width of three Earths.)  You could never get something like that on Earth because gas giants like Jupiter and Saturn are entirely fluid and exist under intense pressures.  I remember seeing  something about a blizzard on Saturn once- any storm on one of those planets makes even the most powerful storm on Earth look puny- hell, they make the entire planet look puny!

 

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

25 minutes ago, Paragon said:

Only because Sandy stalled for a few hours off the coast.  It was close to being a Cat 2 off the NJ coast before it stalled for a few hours (ironically the stall actually made it hit at high tide, so the impact might have been worse even though it was weaker when it made landfall.)  And it still hit with 90-95 mph wind gusts.  This storm is no Sandy but if it hit the coast at a high speed it wouldn't weaken much- the problem is it's weak to begin with.

 

lol @ 90-95 mph gusts

what a garbage storm

Link to comment
Share on other sites

6 minutes ago, Akeem the African Dream said:

lol @ 90-95 mph gusts

what a garbage storm

The difference is that the infrastructure up here wasn't built to withstand those winds like it is down in Florida, and the NJ coast is highly built up and highly susceptible to storm surge, which is where most of the damage occurred.

My house was fine, but I had no power for 12 days after Sandy. The power lines are above ground in most places around here.

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

10 minutes ago, NJwx85 said:

Does anyone know if recon is scheduled anytime soon? I know they just blew the budget between Harvey, Katia and Jose when he was in the deep tropics, but I'm sure the models could use a little extra sampling. 

Forgetting Irma?

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Archived

This topic is now archived and is closed to further replies.

  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.

×
×
  • Create New...