
thunderbolt
Members-
Posts
840 -
Joined
-
Last visited
Content Type
Profiles
Blogs
Forums
American Weather
Media Demo
Store
Gallery
Everything posted by thunderbolt
-
Sam is definitely going to be bumping up the ace that’s for sure
-
Can one of the moderators please change the title to a Tropical storm Sam
-
TROPICAL STORM SAM FORECAST/ADVISORY NUMBER 4NWS NATIONAL HURRICANE CENTER MIAMI FL AL1820211500 UTC THU SEP 23 2021THERE ARE NO COASTAL WATCHES OR WARNINGS IN EFFECT.TROPICAL STORM CENTER LOCATED NEAR 10.9N 38.1W AT 23/1500ZPOSITION ACCURATE WITHIN 20 NMPRESENT MOVEMENT TOWARD THE WEST OR 280 DEGREES AT 14 KTESTIMATED MINIMUM CENTRAL PRESSURE 1003 MBMAX SUSTAINED WINDS 45 KT WITH GUSTS TO 55 KT. TROPICAL STORM SAM FORECAST/ADVISORY NUMBER 4NWS NATIONAL HURRICANE CENTER MIAMI FL AL1820211500 UTC THU SEP 23 2021THERE ARE NO COASTAL WATCHES OR WARNINGS IN EFFECT.TROPICAL STORM CENTER LOCATED NEAR 10.9N 38.1W AT 23/1500ZPOSITION ACCURATE WITHIN 20 NM
-
I totally agree with you brother I’m just telling you what the model showed
-
And it’s a fish storm
-
Looks like GFS at hour 180 is north compared to 18z
-
Well this got interesting overnight
-
2021 Atlantic Hurricane season
thunderbolt replied to StormchaserChuck!'s topic in Tropical Headquarters
I’m surprise the moderators still let him post -
2021 Atlantic Hurricane season
thunderbolt replied to StormchaserChuck!'s topic in Tropical Headquarters
-
You would think with that stout ridge over Alaska and the blocking over the pole it would be a little bit colder I guess the south east ridge is flexing his muscles
-
Well according to One person it’s in Poor shape
-
Don’t forget about Pennsylvania
-
For this it was definitely a moderate La Niña. El Niño and La Niña Years and Intensities Based on Oceanic Niño Index (ONI) Jan Null, CCM Updated thru May-Jun-Jul 2021 The Oceanic Niño Index (ONI) has become the de-facto standard that NOAA uses for identifying El Niño (warm) and La Niña (cool) events in the tropical Pacific. It is the running 3-month mean SST anomaly for the Niño 3.4 region (i.e., 5oN-5oS, 120o-170oW). Events are defined as 5 consecutive overlapping 3-month periods at or above the +0.5o anomaly for warm (El Niño) events and at or below the -0.5 anomaly for cold (La Niña) events. The threshold is further broken down into Weak (with a 0.5 to 0.9 SST anomaly), Moderate (1.0 to 1.4), Strong (1.5 to 1.9) and Very Strong (≥ 2.0) events. For the purpose of this report for an event to be categorized as weak, moderate, strong or very strong it must have equaled or exceeded the threshold for at least 3 consecutive overlapping 3-month periods. El Niño - 26 La Niña - 23 Weak - 11 Moderate - 7 Strong - 5 Very Strong - 3 Weak - 11 Moderate - 5 Strong - 7 1952-53 1951-52 1957-58 1982-83 1954-55 1955-56 1973-74 1953-54 1963-64 1965-66 1997-98 1964-65 1970-71 1975-76 1958-59 1968-69 1972-73 2015-16 1971-72 1995-96 1988-89 1969-70 1986-87 1987-88 1974-75 2011-12 1998-99 1976-77 1994-95 1991-92 1983-84 2020-21 1999-00 1977-78 2002-03 1984-85 2007-08 1979-80 2009-10 2000-01 2010-11 2004-05 2005-06 2006-07 2008-09 2014-15 2016-17 2018-19 2017-18 [Click HERE for full-size image of this graph]
-
I know the Jersey shore got hit pretty good with some storms in fact there was a fatal at Seaside and lifeguard passed away
-
No Major???
-
Ouch that Just might hurt!!!!!
-
2021 Atlantic Hurricane season
thunderbolt replied to StormchaserChuck!'s topic in Tropical Headquarters
What did Houston due to the weather gods -
My humble opinion is once the eastern Pacific calms down then the Atlantic will ramp up but until then Crickets
-
Yeah I’m currently at 91 national weather service has me at 94 I should be able to make up 3° in the next 4 to 5 hours
-
Wow
-
You got that right ice I’m over here in the Quincy Hollow development just got inundated