KLin
Lifer
Originally posted by: ViRGE
Oh well this blows, they never expected Wilma to weaken quite this much, so the next recon flight isn't scheduled until 2pm tomorrow(or it would be today I guess).
Did you mean strengthen? 😕
Originally posted by: ViRGE
Oh well this blows, they never expected Wilma to weaken quite this much, so the next recon flight isn't scheduled until 2pm tomorrow(or it would be today I guess).
Isn't that what I said? 😛Originally posted by: KLin
Originally posted by: ViRGE
Oh well this blows, they never expected Wilma to weaken quite this much, so the next recon flight isn't scheduled until 2pm tomorrow(or it would be today I guess).
Did you mean strengthen? 😕
More like "here goes Gainesville". 😱Originally posted by: DumbGuy
Ahhhhh crap.
Here goes my road trip to Gainesville.
As of now, she's forecast to encounter some shear once she gets into the Gulf, so there is a forecast weakening.Originally posted by: UNCjigga
WTF CAT 5 ALREADY???
Well, there might be some good in this. If past experience from this season proves useful, early strengthening like this usually means the storm will weaken before it hits land. We saw it with Katrina and with Rita. A storm can only get so big before eyewall replacement cycles begin and start eating away at the strongest part of the storm.
HOWEVER...Jeff Masters' blog at wunderground.com shows that the path of Wilma takes it over VERY WARM water that does not cool down until the Keys. Katrina and Rita both passed over cooler water for a full 24 hours--which helped weaken those storms. This may not happen with Wilma, so it may not weaken significantly before landfall. Mr. Masters hasn't updated his blog yet with the Cat 5 info...I s'pose he'll awaken tomorrow and sh*t his pants if its broken a record by then.
Where is that being reported? Weather.com is still showing 892mb with their latest update.Originally posted by: ViRGE
887! New record!
This is from a feed from the current recon plane. It won't be reported to the media until the entire pass is over with.Originally posted by: DAGTA
Where is that being reported? Weather.com is still showing 892mb with their latest update.Originally posted by: ViRGE
887! New record!
Originally posted by: ViRGE
This is from a feed from the current recon plane. It won't be reported to the media until the entire pass is over with.Originally posted by: DAGTA
Where is that being reported? Weather.com is still showing 892mb with their latest update.Originally posted by: ViRGE
887! New record!
I'd like to know also! 😀Originally posted by: tasburrfoot78362
Originally posted by: ViRGE
This is from a feed from the current recon plane. It won't be reported to the media until the entire pass is over with.Originally posted by: DAGTA
Where is that being reported? Weather.com is still showing 892mb with their latest update.Originally posted by: ViRGE
887! New record!
Where did you get this? Just wondering, as this is rather interesting.
Originally posted by: imtim83
Its now 877 MB! 😱
http://twister.sbs.ohio-state.edu/text/tropical/atlantic/Originally posted by: Eli
I'd like to know also! 😀Originally posted by: tasburrfoot78362
Originally posted by: ViRGE
This is from a feed from the current recon plane. It won't be reported to the media until the entire pass is over with.Originally posted by: DAGTA
Where is that being reported? Weather.com is still showing 892mb with their latest update.Originally posted by: ViRGE
887! New record!
Where did you get this? Just wondering, as this is rather interesting.
Yeah, really tiny.. pretty interesting.Originally posted by: ViRGE
Interesting, tiny wind field. It may not strengthen any more, but the windfield is going to likely grow by leaps and bounds over the next couple of eyewall cycles.
Frankly, it's more like madness. It's late Ocotober, this ****** shouldn't be happening.Originally posted by: Eli
Yeah, really tiny.. pretty interesting.Originally posted by: ViRGE
Interesting, tiny wind field. It may not strengthen any more, but the windfield is going to likely grow by leaps and bounds over the next couple of eyewall cycles.
Really? Doesen't hurricane season last well into November?Originally posted by: ViRGE
Frankly, it's more like madness. It's late Ocotober, this ****** shouldn't be happening.Originally posted by: Eli
Yeah, really tiny.. pretty interesting.Originally posted by: ViRGE
Interesting, tiny wind field. It may not strengthen any more, but the windfield is going to likely grow by leaps and bounds over the next couple of eyewall cycles.