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Category Five Hurricane Lee


WxWatcher007
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7 hours ago, CheeselandSkies said:

Every weather forum on the Internet would like to thank the 12Z Euro for the weenie run that was desperately needed to revive interest in Lee.

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A long time ago,  I remember a "weather weenie" run of the ECMWF that said that Hurricane Sandy would come into the coast. Then, a week later, it was a $70 billion disaster. And the WPC invented the term "Frankenstorm" but then regretted it!

Note: Hurricane Lee recent recon says 962mb and maybe 80 kt at the surface, so the NHC value of 95 kt is generous.

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6 minutes ago, isobar17 said:

Those quietly observing know what I mean. The record is the record.

I'm sure they know that I keep reiterating that I don't view this as a major threat to the US because I don't. But the beauty of weather is that its fascinating, difficult to predict and fluid, so maybe my view will change. Let's just see what happens and stop derailing. 

Happy tracking-

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Cat 2 at 11pm... 105 mph

BULLETIN
Hurricane Lee Advisory Number  19
NWS National Hurricane Center Miami FL       AL132023
1100 PM AST Sat Sep 09 2023

...LEE EXPECTED TO GROW IN SIZE OVER THE NEXT FEW DAYS...
...HAZARDOUS BEACH CONDITIONS EXPECTED TO DEVELOP AROUND THE WESTERN
ATLANTIC OVER THE UPCOMING WEEK...


SUMMARY OF 1100 PM AST...0300 UTC...INFORMATION
-----------------------------------------------
LOCATION...21.0N 59.9W
ABOUT 285 MI...455 KM NE OF THE NORTHERN LEEWARD ISLANDS
MAXIMUM SUSTAINED WINDS...105 MPH...165 KM/H
PRESENT MOVEMENT...WNW OR 300 DEGREES AT 9 MPH...15 KM/H
MINIMUM CENTRAL PRESSURE...962 MB...28.41 INCHES
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Hurricane Lee Discussion Number  19
NWS National Hurricane Center Miami FL       AL132023
1100 PM AST Sat Sep 09 2023

While the geostationary satellite appearance of Lee has not changed 
appreciably since the prior advisory, data from a NOAA P-3 
reconnaissance mission in the storm, in addition to earlier GPM and 
SSMIS microwave imagery, indicate that Lee is in the middle of an 
eyewall replacement cycle (ERC). The aircraft has been reporting 
both an inner and outer eyewall, with the outer eyewall gradually 
contracting in size. However, this outer eyewall continues to 
exhibit some asymmetry, consistent with modest vertical wind shear 
still affecting the storm. In addition, the aircraft has reported 
that the inner-core wind field is becoming weaker, but broader, with 
a more muted wind profile outside of the radius of maximum wind. 
This observation is also evident comparing TDR data between the 
morning and evening NOAA-P3 missions. The peak 700 mb flight level 
winds were down to 94 kt, with SFMR only in the 75-85 kt range. The 
initial intensity has been adjusted to a somewhat generous 90 kt for 
this advisory.  

Lee continues to move west-northwestward this evening at 300/9 kt. 
As discussed previously, the mid-level ridge axis currently north of 
Lee is soon expected to shift to its west-southwest, resulting in 
Lee slowing its forward motion, and perhaps making a slight westward 
bend over the next 24-36 hours. Afterwards, an eastward-moving 
mid-latitude trough is expected to erode this ridge and allow Lee to 
turn northward by the end of the forecast period. There remains a 
significant amount of spread in both the deterministic and ensemble 
guidance on when this turn occurs, and then how quickly Lee 
accelerates northward. For now the NHC track forecast remains 
closest to the consensus aids, which have slowed a bit from the 
prior cycle, and the latest track forecast is a bit slower but near 
the same trajectory as the prior advisory. 

While vertical wind shear over Lee appears to be gradual decreasing 
over the system, the ongoing ERC seems to be resulting in the wind 
field broadening versus allowing Lee to re-intensify so far. 
However, once this cycle is complete, reintensification is still 
anticipated, and the NHC intensity forecast still takes Lee back to 
a category 4 hurricane in 36-48 hours, in good agreement with the 
latest HAFS-A/B forecasts, which both explicitly show the ongoing 
ERC. However, Lee's growing wind field, in combination with its 
slowing forward motion, could make the hurricane susceptible to 
feeling the effects of its own cold wake, which the 
atmospheric-ocean coupled HAFS and HWRF models suggest could begin 
to occur beyond 36 hours. Thus, the latest NHC intensity forecast 
shows gradual weakening beginning by that time, with more pronounced 
weakening by the end of the forecast period as the hurricane 
traverses already cooled sea-surface temperatures from Franklin and 
Idalia last week along its forecast track. This intensity forecast 
is in good agreement with the simple consensus aids, but is a little 
lower than the HFIP corrected consensus early on.


KEY MESSAGES:

1. Lee's core is expected to move well north of the northern
Leeward Islands, the Virgin Islands, and Puerto Rico this weekend
and early next week.

2. Dangerous surf and life-threatening rip currents are affecting
portions of the northern Leeward Islands.  These conditions are
spreading westward and northward and will affect Puerto Rico,
Hispaniola, the Turks and Caicos, the Bahamas, and Bermuda during
the next several days.

3. It remains too soon to know what level of impacts, if any, Lee 
might have along the U.S. East Coast, Atlantic Canada, or Bermuda 
late next week, especially since the hurricane is expected to slow 
down considerably over the southwestern Atlantic.  Regardless, 
dangerous surf and rip currents are expected along most of the U.S. 
East Coast beginning tomorrow and continuing into next week as Lee 
grows in size. Users should continue to monitor updates to the 
forecast of Lee during the next several days.


FORECAST POSITIONS AND MAX WINDS

INIT  10/0300Z 21.0N  59.9W   90 KT 105 MPH
 12H  10/1200Z 21.6N  60.9W  100 KT 115 MPH
 24H  11/0000Z 22.4N  62.3W  110 KT 125 MPH
 36H  11/1200Z 23.0N  63.5W  120 KT 140 MPH
 48H  12/0000Z 23.3N  64.7W  115 KT 130 MPH
 60H  12/1200Z 23.6N  65.6W  110 KT 125 MPH
 72H  13/0000Z 24.0N  66.6W  105 KT 120 MPH
 96H  14/0000Z 25.6N  68.0W   95 KT 110 MPH
120H  15/0000Z 28.8N  68.3W   85 KT 100 MPH

$$
Forecaster Papin
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6 hours ago, GaWx said:

The 18Z GEFS has the most US hits yet by a good margin with 8 (26%) (9/16-7): 3 ME, 3 MA, 1 NY/RI, 1 NC

Last 6 GEFS:

18Z 9/9 26%
12Z 9/9 16%
6Z 9/9 16%
0Z 9/9 10%
18Z 9/8 10%
12Z 9/8 10%

The 0Z GEFS US hits went back down to 4 (13%) (9/16-8): 3 ME, 1 NY

So, last 7 GEFS runs: 13%, 26%, 16%, 16%, 10%, 10%, 10%

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VHTs are often associated with RI episodes.  It’s possible Lee might regain some Mojo soon. 
 

From @KeviShader on Twitter:

As an incredible coincidence, we got both a VDM and a GPM MW pass for #Lee's core within 3min of each other, with both data sources supporting a (28nm per recon) eye that is, for now, open to the south => persistent SW shear + dry air intrusions but VHTs have increased markedly.

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19 minutes ago, CheeselandSkies said:

New advisory has the forecast secondary peak down to 115kt. So much for that advisory from Friday morning that had Lee never dropping below 130kt through 06Z Tuesday 9/12. Not only the hurricane models but the multiple deterministic EURO runs and sub-910MB EPS members had my expectations sky-high for this one. :rolleyes:

..long overdue for a new approach to developing a model. The current models are fair at best. Start fresh!..no more model upgrades...upgrading software is precarious at best, at worst it can be a significant downgrade rather than an upgrade.

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