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Major Hurricane Helene


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5 minutes ago, SnoSki14 said:

This could be more impactful than the strong Cat 4-5 hits as of late. It's all about the size when it comes to tropical systems and this one is huge. 

Yea, this is what I have been stressing.....systems like Charlie will pale in comparison to this even it hits as like a 2.

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Question for those on the board more knowledgeable than I am.

I see that the TS warning is extended all the way down the Florida east coast yet the  TS Wind speed probabilities for MIA. FLL and WPB are only 7, 12 and 14% respectively. If the probabilities are that low why does the TS warning extend down that far?

 

Thanks in advance.

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At over 50 miles away from the coast of Cancun local reports show outages and many trees down. A reminder this is a large system that will have significant impacts perhaps even hundreds of miles from the coc 

here in Tampa I am just hoping the storm gets steered quickly up and away from the area, but realistically we know South Tampa will be a wet mess for weeks to come 

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3 minutes ago, bigtenfan said:

Question for those on the board more knowledgeable than I am.

I see that the TS warning is extended all the way down the Florida east coast yet the  TS Wind speed probabilities for MIA. FLL and WPB are only 7, 12 and 14% respectively. If the probabilities are that low why does the TS warning extend down that far?

 

Thanks in advance.

 

Keep in mind that "tropical storm wind speed" means sustained winds of TS force. It does NOT mean there will not be gusts meeting or exceeding sustained TS wind speeds. But a TS warning is not just about wind speed. The other threats need accounted for, too. Hence the TS warning.

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Everything looks on track.  Fully expect Hurricane status by 11:00 a.m. advisory.  Center will not landfall over the Yucatan.  Give it a little time to pull into the southern GOM and clear the influence of the Yucatan and we'll really be on the upswing. 

Surge going to be a big issue for a large area near and east of track.  FL west coast Tampa vicinity on north going to take a hit.  No joke...if ordered to evacuate you should go.  Inland wind and flooding going to be a big problem mainly for Georgia.  Expect massive power outages over a large area.

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Surprised at the lack of Zone A evacuation orders for Hillsborough and Pinellas (they have a partial) Counties.  Surge and wind impact should be more amplified than the last two I-storms, had to evac for both.

edit - just issued for Hillsborough Zone A

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6 minutes ago, bigtenfan said:

Question for those on the board more knowledgeable than I am.

I see that the TS warning is extended all the way down the Florida east coast yet the  TS Wind speed probabilities for MIA. FLL and WPB are only 7, 12 and 14% respectively. If the probabilities are that low why does the TS warning extend down that far?

 

Thanks in advance.

Due to the large size of the storm it is expected that squalls with winds to tropical storm force will move up the east coast of Florida.  This is the reason for the warning in my view.

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34 minutes ago, SnoSki14 said:

This could be more impactful than the strong Cat 4-5 hits as of late. It's all about the size when it comes to tropical systems and this one is huge. 

That's going to be quite the fetch on the West Coast of Florida. Even though Tampa and northward will likely miss the core, the surge impacts should be quite significant. The only saving grace is the speed of the system, it won't have an opportunity to pile up as much water as Katrina did for instance due to the faster movement but a major surge event nonetheless.

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First light is beginning to reveal a much more organized TC near the Yucatán Channel, a harbinger of things to come. 

pE2Kciz.png
 

Recon, radar, and satellite all show a modestly organizing and gradually intensifying TC that will likely be a hurricane by the 11am full advisory. 

With shear reduced over the system itself and dry air most likely out of the way as an inner core forms in the next 12-18 hours, it looks like the runway is primed for Helene to take off in intensity late tonight into Thursday provided the center does not traverse the Yucatán.

You can tell dry air—something that has plagued systems across the basin all season—is not a factor at this time because of the expansive outflow and deep CDO convection that has persisted all night. I would watch the SE quadrant in case some of the drier air to the south wraps in. 

j7GqGGu.png
 

We have a system that’s already sub-980mb as a result, but that’s only part of the story.

Generally speaking, the wind field is still broad. A smaller system would be a hurricane by now with a tighter center. Helene is poised to become one of the largest named storms since 2000.

This will have tremendous implications for the forecast and scale of region wide impacts. 

First, the wind.

hY5PFxM.png
 

This is extraordinary to look at—tropical storm warnings from the Keys to coastal GA for a Gulf storm and hurricane warnings well into southern GA.

The storm already has TS winds expanding 175 miles out and that’ll grow substantially over the next day. In fact, you can already see how large Helene is using zoomed out satellite.

vGu9uVf.png
 

It’s going to take time for the RMW to tighten enough for major hurricane wind speeds to be found. What we’ll likely see are very low pressures with an expansive area of “modest” hurricane force FL then surface winds before RI takes place and tightens the inner core at that point. That said, I don’t believe the HAFS depictions of a small core and large TS field. This may limit peak wind potential some.

That’s not to say the potential for something on the order of a category four isn’t there because it is, but we’ll just have to see how the storm reacts to falling pressure.

Second, the surge. 

What may be lost in peak wind potential will likely be more than made up for in surge, which may be catastrophic in the Big Bend region and major in other locations. 

pwEa3dO.png
 

The difference in category will matter little given the surge potential. While a stronger or weaker peak wind could do significant damage inland, the coastal impacts are already baked in. 

Third, the rain.

If wind and surge weren’t enough—and both have the potential to be high end—rainfall looks to be a major concern well inland. A Predecessor Rain Event looks likely, and a HIGH risk for excessive rainfall has been issued. Extreme rainfall is possible and inland folks should not let their guard down just because Helene is currently well south. 

eL5XV4I.jpeg
 

Fourth, severe potential.

Finally, we have severe potential on the east side of Helene. I think we need to see how banding sets up tomorrow and Friday, but a D2 enhanced risk is pretty significant for a TC.

Rj6zfT3.png
 

This is a long post that didn’t even go into track (though I’m closely watching potential shifts west, possibly worsening wind impacts into the Panhandle and southern GA)

VYMhcHR.png
 

HbmnQqG.png
 

But for the general public the center will matter less than usual given the size of the wind field and surge potential all along the coast. 

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I think that the storms this season may be sorted into two categories. Beryl and now Helene seem to be on the rapidly intensifying categories which haven't (or likely won't) be plagued with dry air and shear and instead fully take advantage of the prime environment, with the other category consisting of storms unable to fully take advantage of the environment due to dry air and shear.   

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2 minutes ago, CoastalWx said:

 

Yeah was going to say, visible shows convection wrapping around, but IR kind of shows the illusion of the center closer to land and south. Microwave imagery helps here.

Core is kinda wild. Meat of it stretches nearly the entire Yucatán channel. 
 

really feels like when an eye does clear it will be massive. 

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Just now, CoastalWx said:

That area from ATL to the N and NE are gonna get a shitload of rain. Big issues there I think especially foothills and mtns.

Yeah - places like the Blue Ridge Mountains are in trouble. Nantahala River area, Ocala River area…Yeesh. Feels like a recipe for disaster with mudslides. 

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2 minutes ago, mclean02 said:

Oh side note concerning how a few models are showing another strong hurricane next week which would be wild.

Saw that, I won't talk too much about it on this thread, but yeah, another homebrew 'cane that the GFS (keep in mind at 240+ hrs) has landfalling on the FL panhandle around 950mb. Safe to say this likely won't verify, but worth keeping an eye on

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27 minutes ago, AStorms13 said:

Hi, long time lurker, first time poster.  Love weather, and super interested in tropical systems.  Am I correct in saying that the size of Helene has expanded quite a lot in the last 2 hours?

Welcome AStorms.  The storm is becoming larger but what you see on the visible satellite is the higher cirrus canopy expanding.  That doesn't mean the surface winds are expanding necessarily.

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