Yeah, remote sensing and in situ recon data all point to Milton being in the initial stage of rapid intensification that will most like go uninterrupted barring any structural changes. Any call on lowest pressure? I could see a 40-50 mb drop occurring by tomorrow night. Perhaps we can't rule out an even lower drop before outer banding begins to intensify and influence the core. I'm going to say 928 mb is not unrealistic by tomorrow evening.
Given the structure, size, and extremely favorable environment ahead, I’ll guess it peaks around 160mph/919mb.
That is not my projected landfall intensity but it’s problematic because it’ll almost certainly trigger an ERC that expands the size of the hurricane—making both wind and surge risk worse.
I’ve noticed it, but I’m a little skeptical something tropical gets going before conditions become more unfavorable. That said, given where we are with this peak—anything spinning has a chance right now.
And from experience, those 10-20 miles may not be known until hours before landfall. That’s why it’s so important for everyone to be prepared along the potential landfall zone.
Recon looks like its first pass will be from SE to NW. I kind of expect this to be near hurricane intensity given the satellite and earlier recon trends we saw but we’ll see.
I’m still far from sold, but the GFS has done well sniffing out CAG/western Caribbean stuff and it would continue the theme of the lid being off. There is a little EPS support from what I saw too this morning.
48 hours for a watch and 36 hours for a warning. They do issue inland watches/warnings. For Helene there were TS warnings all the way to western NC.
Don’t know when Orlando was last under a hurricane warning but given the current track forecast it looks like this could be a hurricane across the peninsula.
Watches are likely at some point today since TS conditions are likely by Tuesday.
That kind of structure tends to foreshadow more significant to rapid intensification, but it’s only one piece of the puzzle. You do still need deep convection over the center and wrapping around to build a true inner core. It’s not a linear process, and as we see time and again the organizational phase often happens in fits and starts.
Recon tomorrow will give us a much better sense of how organized it is and critically, more detail on the environment around the system.
Night, everyone.
Want to keep highlighting the rainfall threat further inland. Someone away from the center track is likely to have significant issues with freshwater flooding.
Too high as in too high with central pressure? The GFS and Euro were about in lock step inside 48h with a landfall pressure in the 950s. But globals are almost always higher for strong hurricanes than reality.
Aside from that, I think what’s telling here is that the GFS went from very weak to in line with the more aggressive Euro and its ensembles.