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Hurricane Debby


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4 minutes ago, eyewall said:

This thing really rotted out. Not sure how any of these totals verify in NC.

I'm thinking it will juice back up a little once it spends some time over the water...  plus the interaction with the inverted trough.
Looks like heavy bands rotate through tomorrow night.  I could see 4-8" easily where the heavy bands train.

 

Precipitable water data backs this up.

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11 minutes ago, PackGrad05 said:

I'm thinking it will juice back up a little once it spends some time over the water...  plus the interaction with the inverted trough.
Looks like heavy bands rotate through tomorrow night.  I could see 4-8" easily where the heavy bands train.

 

Precipitable water data backs this up.

Yeah I mean think of the most extreme example, Harvey. Obviously a totally different situation, but most of the extreme rainfall fell after if dropped to a weak TS/TD. I remember reading somewhere that the majority of fresh water flooding from TCs comes from TSs and TDs

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20 minutes ago, olafminesaw said:

Yeah I mean think of the most extreme example, Harvey. Obviously a totally different situation, but most of the extreme rainfall fell after if dropped to a weak TS/TD. I remember reading somewhere that the majority of fresh water flooding from TCs comes from TSs and TDs

Thats it

Lets get that trough to pick Deb up and get her out of the Southeast.

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3 minutes ago, olafminesaw said:

Yeah I mean think of the most extreme example, Harvey. Obviously a totally different situation, but most of the extreme rainfall fell after if dropped to a weak TS/TD. I remember reading somewhere that the majority of fresh water flooding from TCs comes from TSs and TDs

Yes; it's somewhat similar to this too

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tropical_Storm_Lee_(2011)

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2 hours ago, olafminesaw said:

Yeah I mean think of the most extreme example, Harvey. Obviously a totally different situation, but most of the extreme rainfall fell after if dropped to a weak TS/TD. I remember reading somewhere that the majority of fresh water flooding from TCs comes from TSs and TDs

Not much compares to the horrors Camille caused in Nelson County VA  in about 6 hours back in 69 - nearly a years worth of rain in the mountains in the overnight hours.. At that point she was just a remnant tropical low but other meteorological factors came into play that night...

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14 hours ago, GaWx said:

As the Debby center moved to the SE offshore finally putting us on the backside, winds picked up and steady mainly moderate rains resumed about 1.5 hours ago after little rain since late last night. I had been at ~8.5” for the storm before this. We’ll see how much gets added from this and more to come tonight.

 Further to the above’s 8.5”, I’ve gotten an additional 1.8” since ~6PM yesterday for an updated total so far of ~10.3”, easily the largest amount from a single event since Matthew of early Oct of 2016.

 There’s still on and off light rain falling and it’s breezy here on the backside.

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10 minutes ago, WxWatcher007 said:

Stronger at 11am. Seeing convection start to go up closer to the center but time and a broad center are limiting factors.

Wow, up to 60mph, I wasn't expecting that at all after the NHC reduced landfall strength to 50mph

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12 hours ago, Jrlg1181 said:

Not much compares to the horrors Camille caused in Nelson County VA  in about 6 hours back in 69 - nearly a years worth of rain in the mountains in the overnight hours.. At that point she was just a remnant tropical low but other meteorological factors came into play that night...

Was this the event that did a 1,000 year carve out of river beds?

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12Z UKMET: Whereas the 0Z went in just NE of CHS, the 12Z is a little further NE ~midway between CHS and Georgetown. Then goes NNW to near Charlotte then turns NNE to inland in the NE US:

TROPICAL STORM DEBBY ANALYSED POSITION : 32.0N 79.4W

ATCF IDENTIFIER : AL042024

LEAD CENTRAL MAXIMUM WIND
VERIFYING TIME TIME POSITION PRESSURE (MB) SPEED (KNOTS)
-------------- ---- -------- ------------- -------------
1200UTC 07.08.2024 0 32.0N 79.4W 996 36
0000UTC 08.08.2024 12 32.6N 79.3W 995 32
1200UTC 08.08.2024 24 33.6N 79.5W 997 34
0000UTC 09.08.2024 36 34.7N 80.6W 999 32
1200UTC 09.08.2024 48 37.8N 79.9W 999 31
0000UTC 10.08.2024 60 42.2N 76.6W 996 34
1200UTC 10.08.2024 72 47.1N 70.2W 990 34
0000UTC 11.08.2024 84 49.7N 64.9W 989 37
1200UTC 11.08.2024 96 50.0N 57.0W 992 35
0000UTC 12.08.2024 108 CEASED TRACKING

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