I agree with you on that, Tavores! This reminds me of Irene so much in terms of track and timing. It would be very interesting to have a tropical system move up this way, but we don't need a hurricane again on the East Coast. Euro Model takes the system south of Cuba and into the GOM. The 110mph/Cat 2 is what is a bit concerning about the forecast combined with the track. Stephanie is going down to Miami area to report on the 20th Ann. of Hurricane Andrew and she said this morning that if we have Issac, she is already in place to report on it. Lot of things to think about this morning, but we have some time to get the details in. We may have Issac by this afternoon or possible later this morning. TWC's morning teams seem to be focusing on the worst scenario's.
Yeah, the European is scarier than the GFS as far as strength, a 962mb low around the FL Keys/S. FL, that
could translate to a Major Hurricane. I hope TWC doesn't put the hype machine on full blast too much now BEFORE it's past Cuba. We don't know with true certainty what effects Cuba will have on TD 9 or if it will recover once it's past there. Some tropical cyclones in the past have and some haven't.
A couple of my biggest concerns is
-If this thing manages to be further west into the Gulf it's gonna tap into some boiling SSTs in the 32-33 Celsius range.
With conditions remaining favorable that can be a dangerous combination.
(This is a worst case scenario though)
-The Republican National Convention is taking place in Tampa, FL the week potential "Issac" arrives. I have no doubts at this point that Tampa won't be affected in some shape or fashion whether it's a direct hit or a complete miss.
On a side note, TD 9 looks much better this morning than it did yesterday, convection has really fired around the center. I believe we have our Issac.Another side note, I'm not sure many realized this, but if "Issac" becomes a major hurricane affecting FL/East Coast, it will be the first since Hurricane Wilma in October 2005!
TD 9 (As the sun rises)