Windspeed Posted September 16, 2023 Share Posted September 16, 2023 JB has said next season will double this years numbers with an ace well over 200Sorry, but if you can find anyone who can forecast 200+ ACE accurately, they need to be working for NOAA. Period. Total BS. 3 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Ed, snow and hurricane fan Posted September 16, 2023 Share Posted September 16, 2023 End of month GFS ensembles look interesting Caribbean/maybe ECUSA. Enough of a signal to show up on the means. 4 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
olafminesaw Posted September 16, 2023 Share Posted September 16, 2023 A little home brew weenie bait 2 2 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Ed, snow and hurricane fan Posted September 16, 2023 Share Posted September 16, 2023 4 hours ago, olafminesaw said: A little home brew weenie bait 30 knot storms on the ensemble aren't as interesting as the persistent (0, 6, 12Z) GFS ensembles suggesting a system that might not develop as quickly as its predecessors and pose a Cape Verde season in overtime threat to the E Caribbean (and SEUSA?) Weenies can ween for days, GFS family have seemed decent in not being too overenthusiastic, except in the SW Caribbean where it has done that since probably AVN/MRF days Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
StantonParkHoya Posted September 16, 2023 Share Posted September 16, 2023 Little low, maybe a TD? on the euro for GA/SC Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
MattPetrulli Posted September 16, 2023 Share Posted September 16, 2023 3 minutes ago, StantonParkHoya said: Little low, maybe a TD? on the euro for GA/SC Our next system to watch Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
WxWatcher007 Posted September 17, 2023 Share Posted September 17, 2023 Yeah pretty solid homebrew/hybrid signal for next weekend off the SE coast. 3 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
shaggy Posted September 17, 2023 Share Posted September 17, 2023 2 hours ago, WxWatcher007 said: Yeah pretty solid homebrew/hybrid signal for next weekend off the SE coast. Icon coming in the furthest east at 12 with a weak low with the strongest winds displaced far to the north. Certainly not a fully tropical look to it was Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
MattPetrulli Posted September 17, 2023 Share Posted September 17, 2023 12z Also interaction with high pressure to the north may lead to a tight gradient and creating a larger wind field than normal. I think there's enough here to put out a spot at 8 PM. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Ed, snow and hurricane fan Posted September 17, 2023 Share Posted September 17, 2023 1 hour ago, MattPetrulli said: 12z Also interaction with high pressure to the north may lead to a tight gradient and creating a larger wind field than normal. I think there's enough here to put out a spot at 8 PM. I like my isobars a little more circular. Longer term, Euro and ensembles and op GFS suggest a fish from NHC 7 day orange, but enough W members on GFS ensembles to suggest a NE Caribbean/Bermuda threat. Edit to Add: weaker Euro members aren't recurving although the mean at 240 hours looks like OTS Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
GaWx Posted September 17, 2023 Share Posted September 17, 2023 6 hours ago, shaggy said: Icon coming in the furthest east at 12 with a weak low with the strongest winds displaced far to the north. Certainly not a fully tropical look to it was Yeah, probably ST. The UKMET has a hybrid low form in the E GOM instead. 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
shaggy Posted September 17, 2023 Share Posted September 17, 2023 35 minutes ago, GaWx said: Yeah, probably ST. The UKMET has a hybrid low form in the E GOM instead. In this situation the hybrid or ST will likely bring bigger impacts to larger areas of the coast versus a true TD/TS. Gfs has a decent area of gale force winds up the southeast coast far away from the center 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
GaWx Posted September 17, 2023 Share Posted September 17, 2023 2 hours ago, shaggy said: In this situation the hybrid or ST will likely bring bigger impacts to larger areas of the coast versus a true TD/TS. Gfs has a decent area of gale force winds up the southeast coast far away from the center This only quite vaguely resembles 1984 (Diana), which originated from the tail end energy on a rather strong cold front going offshore/nontropical which quickly became tropical. But 1984 was an extremely rare storm (100+ year storm?) and it occurred two weeks earlier during heart of the season. I don’t look for anything like that of course and this could easily turn out to be no big deal other than a good rainfall producer for some areas. However, in the extreme, this could be a STD/STS that becomes a TC (especially if it then moves NE offshore). Regardless, it is an interesting situation due to uncertainty. Edit: late August of 1898 may have been somewhat similar to 1984 that also became a hurricane that came back into the SE coast. Neither 1898 nor 1984 was during El Niño by the way. I’ll look to see if I can find more. But those are two of the most extreme cases off the top of my head. This is more or less a potential “ridge over troubled waters” setup where a rather strong surface high to the north provides lower level convergence to the south, which leads to lift and then the formation of a sfc low. 2 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
shaggy Posted September 18, 2023 Share Posted September 18, 2023 2 hours ago, GaWx said: This only quite vaguely resembles 1984 (Diana), which originated from the tail end energy on a rather strong cold front going offshore/nontropical which quickly became tropical. But 1984 was an extremely rare storm (100+ year storm?) and it occurred two weeks earlier during heart of the season. I don’t look for anything like that of course and this could easily turn out to be no big deal other than a good rainfall producer for some areas. However, in the extreme, this could be a STD/STS that becomes a TC (especially if it then moves NE offshore). Regardless, it is an interesting situation due to uncertainty. Edit: late August of 1898 may have been somewhat similar to 1984 that also became a hurricane that came back into the SE coast. Neither 1898 nor 1984 was during El Niño by the way. I’ll look to see if I can find more. But those are two of the most extreme cases off the top of my head. This is more or less a potential “ridge over troubled waters” setup where a rather strong surface high to the north provides lower level convergence to the south, which leads to lift and then the formation of a sfc low. I believe Gustav 2004 also quickly developed as it moved onshore SC. Nothing suggest anything similar here though 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
GaWx Posted September 18, 2023 Share Posted September 18, 2023 42 minutes ago, shaggy said: I believe Gustav 2004 also quickly developed as it moved onshore SC. Nothing suggest anything similar here though Thank you. Indeed, Gaston (what you meant) of late August of 2004, in this case during a weak El Niño, joins Diana and late Aug of 1898 as a nontropical origin TC that then moved into the SE US as an H. Looking to see if I find more. Bob of 1991 was nontropical that hit the NE as a H. But I was looking for those that hit NC south. 3 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
GaWx Posted September 18, 2023 Share Posted September 18, 2023 12 hours ago, GaWx said: Thank you. Indeed, Gaston (what you meant) of late August of 2004, in this case during a weak El Niño, joins Diana and late Aug of 1898 as a nontropical origin TC that then moved into the SE US as an H. Looking to see if I find more. Bob of 1991 was nontropical that hit the NE as a H. But I was looking for those that hit NC south. I found several more including Arthur of early July of 2014 with mesoscale complex origin in the GOM and Cindy of early July of 1959 (not El Niño), which formed from a nontropical low along a cold front off FL. So, for the SE so far: -Arthur 2014: early July developing weak Nino cat 2 into NC -Gaston 2004: late Aug weak Niño cat 1 into SC -Diana of 1984: early to mid Sep incoming Nina cat 2 into NC -Cindy of 1959: early Jul neutral ENSO cat 1 into SC -Yankee Hurricane of 1935: formed from nontropical low E of Bermuda Oct 30 that hit SE FL as a cat 2 H Nov 4th! Warm neutral ENSO -Storm #5 of 1913: early Oct formed from nontropical low off NE US and hit SC as cat 1/developing Nino -Storm #2 of 1898: late Aug cold neutral into GA cat 1 *Edited to add several more including Yankee Hurricane of 1935 (based on link below) and storm #5 of 1913 So, a TC that is purely nontropical in origin has resulted in a landfalling H on the SE US coast ~every 18 years on average over the last 125 years. The strongest landfalls were the three cat 2 hits, Arthur of 2014, Diana of 1984, and the Yankee H of 1935. Landfalls: 3 SC, 2 NC, 1 GA, 1 FL My educated guess based on recollection is that TS landfalls on the SE coast from nontropical origins have occurred a good bit more often than the once/18 years of H landfalls. But that’s intuitive because it typically takes a good bit of time for transition to tropical and there often isn’t a lot of time over water with them developing close to home. Edit: I was able to confirm a much higher frequency of SE TS landfalls vs H landfalls from a non-tropical origin: 12 in 73 years or ~1 every 6 years on average. So, chances of a nontropical originating TC landfalling on the SE US as a TS are ~3 times higher than that for a H: 2022: Colin 2021: Danny 2015: Ana 2007: Gabrielle 2002: Kyle 1981: Bret 1976: Dottie 1967: Doria 1965: #9 1962: #2 1960: Brenda 1952: #3 https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/1935_Yankee_hurricane 1 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
jconsor Posted September 18, 2023 Share Posted September 18, 2023 Regardless of whether the system off the SE US coast becomes subtropical, there is a substantial risk of heavy rainfall and flooding from eastern NC to the eastern mid-Atlantic and Long Island. 4 1 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
jconsor Posted September 18, 2023 Share Posted September 18, 2023 11 hours ago, GaWx said: I found several more including Arthur of early July of 2014 with mesoscale complex origin in the GOM and Cindy of early July of 1959 (not El Niño), which formed from a nontropical low along a cold front off FL. So, for the SE so far: -Arthur 2014: early July developing weak Nino cat 2 into NC -Gaston 2004: late Aug weak Niño cat 1 into SC -Diana of 1984: early to mid Sep incoming Nina cat 2 into NC -Cindy of 1959: early Jul neutral ENSO cat 1 into SC -Yankee Hurricane of 1935: formed from nontropical low E of Bermuda Oct 30 that hit SE FL as a cat 2 H Nov 4th! Warm neutral ENSO -Storm #5 of 1913: early Oct formed from nontropical low off NE US and hit SC as cat 1/developing Nino -Storm #2 of 1898: late Aug cold neutral into GA cat 1 *Edited to add several more including Yankee Hurricane of 1935 (based on link below) and storm #5 of 1913 So, a TC that is purely nontropical in origin has resulted in a landfalling H on the SE US coast ~every 18 years on average over the last 125 years. The strongest landfalls were the three cat 2 hits, Arthur of 2014, Diana of 1984, and the Yankee H of 1935. Landfalls: 3 SC, 2 NC, 1 GA, 1 FL My educated guess based on recollection is that TS landfalls on the SE coast from nontropical origins have occurred a good bit more often than the once/18 years of H landfalls. But that’s intuitive because it typically takes a good bit of time for transition to tropical and there often isn’t a lot of time over water with them developing close to home. Edit: I was able to confirm a much higher frequency of SE TS landfalls vs H landfalls from a non-tropical origin: 13 in 73 years or ~1 every 6 years on average. So, chances of a nontropical originating TC landfalling on the SE US as a TS are ~3 times higher than that for a H: 2022: Colin 2021: Danny 2015: Ana 2007: Gabrielle 2002: Kyle 1981: Bret 1976: Dottie 1967: Doria 1965: #9 1962: #2 1960: Brenda 1952: #3 https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/1935_Yankee_hurricane Very helpful summary of the historical context. Thanks, Larry! I think your summary shows that given a few days (even as little as 36-48 hours) over water off the SE US coast, a system of non-tropical origins with a decent upper-level wind setup can become a hurricane. Of course, the majority of such systems remain at tropical/subtropical storm strength. FYI today's 0Z run of the NASA GEOS-5 model is showing what looks to be a high-end TS or cat 1 hurricane, certainly a more consolidated system than the global models (GFS, GEM, ECMWF) are indicating.https://fluid.nccs.nasa.gov/wxmaps I believe the NASA GEOS-5 model is run at 7 km resolution. 3 2 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
GaWx Posted September 18, 2023 Share Posted September 18, 2023 Thanks, Yaakov. To clarify for the readers, the stats I presented are only for those that actually made landfall on the SE US. So, they wouldn’t apply to any that go NE and stay offshore, which may increase the chance for a H vs those that hit the SE. Based on everything I’ve seen for the current setup along with my analysis of over seven decades of history, I predict that IF this were to ever transition to a TC and IF it then were to landfall on the SE US that it would landfall there as a TS. Also, if it were to landfall there, I predict either NC or SC with further N in SC favored over further S. This doesn’t look to me like a FL or GA landfall though nothing is certain because nothing is ever certain especially this far out. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
GaWx Posted September 18, 2023 Share Posted September 18, 2023 I went ahead and created a new thread on this potential late week offshore SE US STC/TC here: 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
NorthHillsWx Posted September 19, 2023 Share Posted September 19, 2023 FINALLY the MDR is showing signs or relaxing. Increasing shear values start in the next 8-10 days and models are mixed on development until then. It’s been a wild ride for an El Niño year and one of the most active MDR seasons in awhile (recency bias). Thankfully the El Niño steering was in place allowing all of the storms to recurve. I think our attention rightfully turns to the NW Caribbean/homegrown scenarios for the rest of the season. 2 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
jconsor Posted September 20, 2023 Share Posted September 20, 2023 I know most of our collective attention is on the potential subtropical system off the SE US coast. However, I think the system in the E. Atlantic (currently given a 70% chance of developing by NHC) is worth watching carefully, since down the road in 7-10 days it has a decent opportunity to reach the Caribbean or western Atlantic. This is a sneaky wave which will likely not develop in the next 3-4 days, but instead continue heading west under a strong ridge. We're dealing with two waves that will likely merge here - firstly the one outlooked by NHC that just came off the African coast, and secondly a low-latitude ITCZ wave currently around 40W. The two systems should combine by late Fri-early Sat into a broad wave. This would initially slow development, due to its large size and lack of concentrated vorticity. This system likely will find better upper level conditions (strong diffluence aloft, deeper moisture) once it passes 40W and clears the strong UL trough in the east Atlantic, and especially as it nears 60W and the Leeward/Windward islands. With a much stronger than usual ridge for this time of year over the central Atlantic, there is a decent chance this system makes it into the eastern and northern Caribbean or heads slightly N of the Caribbean to near the Bahamas. 4 3 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
GaWx Posted September 20, 2023 Share Posted September 20, 2023 27 minutes ago, jconsor said: I know most of our collective attention is on the potential subtropical system off the SE US coast. However, I think the system in the E. Atlantic (currently given a 70% chance of developing by NHC) is worth watching carefully, since down the road in 7-10 days it has a decent opportunity to reach the Caribbean or western Atlantic. This is a sneaky wave which will likely not develop in the next 3-4 days, but instead continue heading west under a strong ridge. We're dealing with two waves that will likely merge here - firstly the one outlooked by NHC that just came off the African coast, and secondly a low-latitude ITCZ wave currently around 40W. The two systems should combine by late Fri-early Sat into a broad wave. This would initially slow development, due to its large size and lack of concentrated vorticity. This system likely will find better upper level conditions (strong diffluence aloft, deeper moisture) once it passes 40W and clears the strong UL trough in the east Atlantic, and especially as it nears 60W and the Leeward/Windward islands. With a much stronger than usual ridge for this time of year over the central Atlantic, there is a decent chance this system makes it into the eastern and northern Caribbean or heads slightly N of the Caribbean to near the Bahamas. 12Z UKMET had this (0Z is further down in this post): NEW TROPICAL CYCLONE FORECAST TO DEVELOP AFTER 54 HOURS FORECAST POSITION AT T+ 54 : 14.5N 27.2W LEAD CENTRAL MAXIMUM WIND VERIFYING TIME TIME POSITION PRESSURE (MB) SPEED (KNOTS) -------------- ---- -------- ------------- ------------- 0000UTC 22.09.2023 60 14.5N 29.0W 1008 31 1200UTC 22.09.2023 72 15.0N 32.2W 1007 32 0000UTC 23.09.2023 84 15.3N 34.9W 1006 36 1200UTC 23.09.2023 96 15.8N 37.9W 1005 38 0000UTC 24.09.2023 108 16.3N 39.9W 1005 37 1200UTC 24.09.2023 120 16.7N 42.4W 1004 44 0000UTC 25.09.2023 132 17.4N 44.3W 1003 47 1200UTC 25.09.2023 144 17.3N 46.7W 1003 48 0000UTC 26.09.2023 156 17.2N 48.9W 1003 47 1200UTC 26.09.2023 168 17.1N 49.9W 1001 60 ——————— 0Z UKMET: At 168 hours TS moving W at 15 mph 300 mi NE of Leewards NEW TROPICAL CYCLONE FORECAST TO DEVELOP AFTER 60 HOURS FORECAST POSITION AT T+ 60 : 15.0N 33.7W LEAD CENTRAL MAXIMUM WIND VERIFYING TIME TIME POSITION PRESSURE (MB) SPEED (KNOTS) -------------- ---- -------- ------------- ------------- 1200UTC 22.09.2023 60 15.0N 33.7W 1009 30 0000UTC 23.09.2023 72 15.6N 36.3W 1008 30 1200UTC 23.09.2023 84 16.0N 39.3W 1008 31 0000UTC 24.09.2023 96 16.3N 41.7W 1008 30 1200UTC 24.09.2023 108 16.4N 43.6W 1007 37 0000UTC 25.09.2023 120 17.2N 46.4W 1007 36 1200UTC 25.09.2023 132 17.8N 49.2W 1008 37 0000UTC 26.09.2023 144 18.3N 52.1W 1008 42 1200UTC 26.09.2023 156 18.6N 55.5W 1007 42 0000UTC 27.09.2023 168 18.4N 58.2W 1005 37 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
GaWx Posted September 20, 2023 Share Posted September 20, 2023 I’ve found only three storms on record since the late 1800s that have formed in the MDR E of 50W Sep 20+ and hit the CONUS: 1) 2002’s Lili: TD formed 9/21 near 45W and hit LA 10/3 as a H; El Nino 2) 1966’s Inez: TD formed 9/21 near 35W and hit FL Keys 10/4 as a H; not El Niño 3) 1893’s storm #9 formed 9/25 near 25W and hit Carolinas 10/13 as a MH; not El Nino 3 2 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Normandy Posted September 20, 2023 Share Posted September 20, 2023 On 9/19/2023 at 5:23 AM, NorthHillsWx said: FINALLY the MDR is showing signs or relaxing. Increasing shear values start in the next 8-10 days and models are mixed on development until then. It’s been a wild ride for an El Niño year and one of the most active MDR seasons in awhile (recency bias). Thankfully the El Niño steering was in place allowing all of the storms to recurve. I think our attention rightfully turns to the NW Caribbean/homegrown scenarios for the rest of the season. Not sure what you are seeing. We have a major hurricane threat for the islands In next 8 days with an additional system behind it in the GFS. There are no signs of the MDR shutting down until early to mid October. People have gotta let the El Niño go lol it has lost. Clearly something else is going on that is allowing the basin to produce in an epic fashion despite this El Niño. 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
GaWx Posted September 20, 2023 Share Posted September 20, 2023 7 hours ago, GaWx said: 12Z UKMET had this (0Z is further down in this post): NEW TROPICAL CYCLONE FORECAST TO DEVELOP AFTER 54 HOURS FORECAST POSITION AT T+ 54 : 14.5N 27.2W LEAD CENTRAL MAXIMUM WIND VERIFYING TIME TIME POSITION PRESSURE (MB) SPEED (KNOTS) -------------- ---- -------- ------------- ------------- 0000UTC 22.09.2023 60 14.5N 29.0W 1008 31 1200UTC 22.09.2023 72 15.0N 32.2W 1007 32 0000UTC 23.09.2023 84 15.3N 34.9W 1006 36 1200UTC 23.09.2023 96 15.8N 37.9W 1005 38 0000UTC 24.09.2023 108 16.3N 39.9W 1005 37 1200UTC 24.09.2023 120 16.7N 42.4W 1004 44 0000UTC 25.09.2023 132 17.4N 44.3W 1003 47 1200UTC 25.09.2023 144 17.3N 46.7W 1003 48 0000UTC 26.09.2023 156 17.2N 48.9W 1003 47 1200UTC 26.09.2023 168 17.1N 49.9W 1001 60 ——————— 0Z UKMET: At 168 hours TS moving W at 15 mph 300 mi NE of Leewards NEW TROPICAL CYCLONE FORECAST TO DEVELOP AFTER 60 HOURS FORECAST POSITION AT T+ 60 : 15.0N 33.7W LEAD CENTRAL MAXIMUM WIND VERIFYING TIME TIME POSITION PRESSURE (MB) SPEED (KNOTS) -------------- ---- -------- ------------- ------------- 1200UTC 22.09.2023 60 15.0N 33.7W 1009 30 0000UTC 23.09.2023 72 15.6N 36.3W 1008 30 1200UTC 23.09.2023 84 16.0N 39.3W 1008 31 0000UTC 24.09.2023 96 16.3N 41.7W 1008 30 1200UTC 24.09.2023 108 16.4N 43.6W 1007 37 0000UTC 25.09.2023 120 17.2N 46.4W 1007 36 1200UTC 25.09.2023 132 17.8N 49.2W 1008 37 0000UTC 26.09.2023 144 18.3N 52.1W 1008 42 1200UTC 26.09.2023 156 18.6N 55.5W 1007 42 0000UTC 27.09.2023 168 18.4N 58.2W 1005 37 The 12Z UKMET dropped this from becoming a TC. UK goes through 168. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
WxWatcher007 Posted September 20, 2023 Share Posted September 20, 2023 40 minutes ago, Normandy said: Not sure what you are seeing. We have a major hurricane threat for the islands In next 8 days with an additional system behind it in the GFS. There are no signs of the MDR shutting down until early to mid October. People have gotta let the El Niño go lol it has lost. Clearly something else is going on that is allowing the basin to produce in an epic fashion despite this El Niño. I disagree in part. Nino definitely lost during the last four weeks, but the MDR is more hostile than it was even a week ago, particularly with SAL. Not enough to keep that wave from developing, but it may stunt its development for a bit. I do think we’re transitioning to the western Caribbean and SE coast as we approach October but that’s not saying much because that’s climo. Will waves keep rolling off, yeah, but development is probably going to be more delayed or halted altogether, especially if shear picks up in the eastern Caribbean. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Normandy Posted September 20, 2023 Share Posted September 20, 2023 My point is this. My man said on 9/19 that the MDR is relaxing and implying that the MDR is shutting down. Models all show a very active MDR the next 8-10 days. This same line if thinking was used to assume the last four weeks would not happen when all seasonal models said it would. If modeling is showing an active MDR why imply El Niño is going to hamper it when there has been zero evidence of traditional El Niño impacts to hurricane development this year? You are right climo does begin to shut down the MDR but that goes without saying. it’ll be interesting the studies done on this season Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Ed, snow and hurricane fan Posted September 20, 2023 Share Posted September 20, 2023 40 minutes ago, WxWatcher007 said: I disagree in part. Nino definitely lost during the last four weeks, but the MDR is more hostile than it was even a week ago, particularly with SAL. Not enough to keep that wave from developing, but it may stunt its development for a bit. I do think we’re transitioning to the western Caribbean and SE coast as we approach October but that’s not saying much because that’s climo. Will waves keep rolling off, yeah, but development is probably going to be more delayed or halted altogether, especially if shear picks up in the eastern Caribbean. I'm not sure the usual 'second season' in the Caribbean in October happens this year. 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
NorthHillsWx Posted September 20, 2023 Share Posted September 20, 2023 54 minutes ago, Normandy said: My point is this. My man said on 9/19 that the MDR is relaxing and implying that the MDR is shutting down. Models all show a very active MDR the next 8-10 days. This same line if thinking was used to assume the last four weeks would not happen when all seasonal models said it would. If modeling is showing an active MDR why imply El Niño is going to hamper it when there has been zero evidence of traditional El Niño impacts to hurricane development this year? You are right climo does begin to shut down the MDR but that goes without saying. it’ll be interesting the studies done on this season I said in 8-10 days it will begin to become more hostile. It still looks that way but in 6-8 days now. That doesn’t apply to the current wave which may develop before modeled shear increases, which looks substantial in MDR 2 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Recommended Posts
Create an account or sign in to comment
You need to be a member in order to leave a comment
Create an account
Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!
Register a new accountSign in
Already have an account? Sign in here.
Sign In Now