What to watch for today
Posted by
JAC on 8/4/2010, 7:38 am
The convection north of 20N is MCS driven by two things:
1) Strong shear from the TUTT 2) High boundary-layer theta-e air infeed as seen on the Juice Loop.
If Colin reforms today, he will steal (cut-off) the juice from the convection.
So, if you see the convection north of 20N dissipate today, that is a good sign Colin is making a comeback.
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In this thread:
Colin coud Roll-Over King TUTT -
JAC,
8/4/2010, 7:11 am- Best Track back to 35 knots - JAC, 8/4/2010, 8:53 pm
- Today's visible loop - Chris in Tampa, 8/4/2010, 5:29 pm
- East Bahama Buoy taking a Nose Dive - JAC, 8/4/2010, 3:44 pm
- RECON SFMR 53 knots - JAC, 8/4/2010, 1:38 pm
- Re: Colin coud Roll-Over King TUTT - BobbiStorm, 8/4/2010, 11:56 am
- New WINDSAT Data: Look ar 16N 57.3W - JAC, 8/4/2010, 10:42 am
- Re: Colin coud Roll-Over King TUTT - Conclue, 8/4/2010, 10:10 am
- Re: Colin coud Roll-Over King TUTT - ArgosyTn, 8/4/2010, 10:04 am
- Not good if this takes a prolonged straight north track - JAC, 8/4/2010, 8:57 am
- F-17 just came in. Very nice cell. NHC at 20%. RECON Today - JAC, 8/4/2010, 8:01 am
- What to watch for today - JAC, 8/4/2010, 7:38 am
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