Satellite image of Isaias
Visible GOES-17 satellite image of Hurricane Isaias at 15:10Z (11:10 a.m. EDT) Saturday, August 1, 2020. (Image credit: NOAA/RAMMB)

Hurricane Isaias (pronounced ees-ah-EE-ahs) plowed through the Bahama Island chain Friday and Saturday, making landfall over Andros Island in the northwest Bahamas late Saturday morning. Isaias is predicted to bring heavy rains and strong winds to the entire U.S. East Coast Saturday through Tuesday.

Figure 1
Figure 1. Radar image of Hurricane Isaias at 11:50 a.m. EDT Saturday, August 1, 2020, when the center of the storm was over Andros Island in the Bahamas. (Credit: bahamasweather.org via Brian McNoldy)

At 11 a.m. Saturday, August 1, Isaias was pounding the northwest Bahamas as a category 1 hurricane with 80 mph winds and a central pressure of 987 mb. An observing site at Blue Lagoon on New Providence Island recorded sustained winds of 61 mph, gusting to 63 mph, at 8:30 a.m. EDT Saturday. The capital of Nassau, on New Providence Island, reported sustained winds of 36 mph, gusting to 49 mph, at 11 a.m. EDT Saturday. A personal weather station on Crooked Island received 4.24” of rain on Friday.

Bahamas radar showed that Isaias has struggled to build an eyewall from Friday afternoon through Saturday afternoon, and has typically been able to maintain only about 50% of a complete eyewall, located along the north side of its center (see the excellent radar loop from Brian McNoldy). Unfortunately, Isaias is likely to pass very close on Saturday afternoon to one of the Bahama Islands hardest-hit by last year’s Hurricane Dorian, Grand Bahama Island.

Figure 2
Figure 2. Preliminary Rainfall Totals from Tropical Storm Isaias over the Dominican Republic on July 30, 2020. (Image credit: ONAMET)

Considerable damage in the Dominican Republic and Puerto Rico

In the Dominican Republic, floods from Isaias’s heavy rains killed two people, damaged or destroyed 167 homes, and caused the evacuation of 5,595 people, according to Dominican Today. Flooding knocked out 73 aqueducts, affecting the water supply for 1.4 million people. The peak 24-hour rainfall amount in the Dominican Republic was 11.00″ (279.4 mm) at Sabana De La Mar, on the north coast.

Isaias brought torrential rains and flooding to Puerto Rico, with preliminary flood damage to the municipality of Mayagüez, on the west coast of the island, estimated at $14 million, according to El Nuevo Dia. The storm knocked out power to more than 448,000 customers at its height on Thursday.

Figure 3
Figure 3. The 11 a.m. EDT Saturday, August 1, 2020, track forecast from the National Hurricane Center put the entire U.S. East Coast and most the southeast coast of Canada in the cone of uncertainty for Isaias. (Image credit: NOAA/NHC)

Entire U.S. East Coast to get impacts from Isaias

Tropical storm and hurricane warnings have been hoisted for most of the east coast of Florida, and it is likely that nearly the entire U.S. East Coast will be under a watch or warning from Isaias at some time between Saturday and Tuesday. The region at highest risk is eastern North Carolina, which on Monday may lie on the strong (right-hand) side of a potential landfall by Isaias.

Isaias’s first spiral band to affect Florida moved over Miami on Saturday morning, and rainfall amounts of 2 – 4 inches are expected along the state’s east coast through Monday. In the Lake Okeechobee watershed, rains of about two inches are expected. This should not be a concern for the lake’s water level, which stood at 13.21′ on July 31 – about 0.5 feet below average for the date. The Army Corps of Engineers tries to maintain the water levels in the lake below a maximum of 15.5′ in order to relieve pressure on the aging Herbert Hoover Dike that surrounds the lake. Two inches of rain can raise the water levels in the lake a little less than a foot, so Isaias’s rains should keep the lake well below the 15.5′ level. The increased water levels in the lake resulting from Isaias’s rains will not lead to water releases, which have created toxic algae blooms along both the east and west coasts of Florida in the past. I discussed the issues bedeviling the dike in a 2017 post after Hurricane Irma’s rains of 8 – 12″ raised the lake level by 3.5′.

Figure 4
Figure 4. Five-day rainfall amounts ending at 8 a.m. EDT Thursday, August 6, 2020. Isaias is expected to dump 2 – 4 inches of rain along a long swath of the U.S. East Coast. (Image credit: NOAA)

Forecast for Isaias

Satellite images on Saturday afternoon showed that Isaias had a large area of intense thunderstorms along the east side of the center of circulation. Isaias was in a region dominated by southwesterly upper-level winds associated with a large-scale trough of low pressure. These winds were creating unfavorable conditions for intensification, with high wind shear of 20 – 25 knots. In addition, this shear was driving dry air from the west side of the hurricane into its center, keeping heavy thunderstorms limited on its west side. Sea surface temperatures (SSTs) were a warm 29 – 29.5 degrees Celsius (84 – 85°F), and Isaias was embedded in a moderately dry atmosphere with a mid-level relative humidity of 50 – 55%. Overall, these conditions favor only slow changes to Isaias’s strength through Monday. Most of the intensity models favor slow weakening, as does the official NHC forecast.

Figure 5
Figure 5. Predicted surface wind (colors) and pressure (black lines) at 0Z Tuesday (8 p.m. EDT Monday), from the 6Z Saturday, August 1, 2020 run of the HWRF model. The model predicted that Isaias would be making landfall near the South Carolina/North Carolina border as a category 1 hurricane with peak winds of 68 knots (78 mph, purple colors) and a central pressure of 991 mb. (Image credit: Tropical Tidbits)

The models are very unified in bringing Isaias to a point very close to the coast in central Florida on Sunday afternoon, when Isaias is expected to turn more to the north and north-northeast as a result of the steering influence of the trough of low pressure to its west.

On Monday and Tuesday, Isaias may experience a reduction in shear, to 10 – 20 knots, as shown in the 12Z Saturday run of the SHIPS model. With SSTs of 29 – 29.5 degrees Celsius (84 – 85°F) – unusually warm for late July – extending northwards all along the coasts of South and North Carolina, Isaias could be strengthening because of the reduced shear and warm water as it approaches a possible landfall in the Carolinas on Monday afternoon or evening.

Once Isaias moves beyond the warm Gulf Stream waters to the north of North Carolina, steady weakening is likely, with most of the intensity models and the official NHC forecast predicting it by then will be a strong tropical storm with 55 – 70 mph winds during its closest approach to New England on Tuesday night through Wednesday morning. Rainfall will be increasing on the west side of Isaias over time, and totals of 4″ – 6″ will be possible along the urban corridor from Washington to New York.

Figure 6
Figure 6. Visible MODIS satellite image of TD 10 north of the Cabo Verde Islands on Saturday morning, August 1, 2020. (Image credit: NASA Worldview)

Short-lived Tropical Depression Ten forms off the coast of Africa

Tropical wave 93L developed into Tropical Depression Ten between the Cabo Verde Islands and the coast of Africa on Friday afternoon. The depression is unlikely to survive into Sunday, though, since on Saturday morning it moved over cool waters with SSTs of 25 degrees Celsius (77°F).

TD 10 had only a limited amount of heavy thunderstorm activity Saturday afternoon, as seen on satellite images. At 11 a.m. EDT Saturday, with top winds of 30 mph, TD 10 was headed northwestwards at 14 mph. This track will take it into a stable air mass and over even cooler waters, and TD 10 is expected to dissipate by Sunday morning.

Next system to watch for development

A westward-moving tropical wave located about 600 miles east of the Leeward Islands on Saturday morning was producing a bit of shower activity. Some slow development of this system is possible as it turns northwestward and passes well north of the Leeward Islands by Monday.

In an 8 a.m. EDT Saturday Tropical Weather Outlook, NHC gave the system two-day and five-day odds of formation of 10% and 60%, respectively. Although the system has some model support for development, it does not appear to be a threat to any land areas.

The next name on the Atlantic list of storms is Josephine. The current record for earliest 10th Atlantic named storm formation is August 22, 2005, when Jose formed.


7/31 Original Post

Hurricane Isaias satellite view
Visible GOES-17 satellite image of Hurricane Isaias at 1:43 p.m. EDT Friday, July 31, 2020. (Image credit: NOAA/RAMMB)

Hurricane Isaias (pronounced ees-ah-EE-ahs) made landfall as a tropical storm with 60 mph winds on Thursday afternoon on the southeast coast of the Dominican Republic, bringing damaging flooding, as well as drought relief, to Puerto Rico and the Dominican Republic. Isaias is predicted to bring heavy rains and strong winds to the entire Bahama Island chain Friday and Saturday, and to the entire U.S. East Coast Saturday through Tuesday.

Flooding rescuers
Rescuers in Hato Mayor Province of the Dominican Republic help a resident navigate knee-high flood waters from Tropical Storm Isaias on July 31, 2020. (Image credit: Civil Defense of Dominican Republic)

At 11 a.m. Friday, July 31, Isaias was pounding the southeastern Bahamas as a category 1 hurricane with 75 mph winds. A private weather observing site at Long Bay Beach in Providenciales reported a sustained wind of 55 mph (86 km/h) and a gust to 59 mph (95 km/h) early Friday morning.

Figure 1
Figure 1. Preliminary rainfall totals from Tropical Storm Isaias. (Image credit: National Weather Service, San Juan, Puerto Rico)

Damaging flooding, drought relief for Puerto Rico and Dominican Republic

Isaias brought torrential rains and flooding to Puerto Rico, with more than half of Puerto Rico receiving between five and 12 inches of rain (Figure 1). At the peak of the storm on Thursday, the National Weather Service in San Juan, Puerto Rico, listed seven rivers on the island that were above flood stage, and 15 others near flood stage.

Preliminary flood damage to the municipality of Mayagüez, on the west coast of the island, was estimated at $14 million, said the manager of the Municipal Emergency Management Office, Israel Martínez Cuevas, in an interview with El Nuevo Dia. The storm knocked out power to more than 448,000 customers in Puerto Rico on Thursday, Fernando Padilla, an official with the Puerto Rico Electric Power Authority, told Primera Hora. Main-trunk transmission lines that carry electricity from the south to the north of the island were down, as were local transmission lines.

In the Dominican Republic, floods from Isaias’s heavy rains knocked out power, flooded roads, and caused at least one death, according to Dominican Today. A Weather Underground personal weather station on the north shore of the Dominican Republic at Playa Bonita Beach reported 8 inches of rain on Thursday, July 30. At Hato Mayor del Rey in the east-central Dominican Republic, six feet of flooding occurred in some buildings, according to this tweet.

On the positive side, Isaias’s rains will help alleviate moderate to severe drought conditions that were affecting both Puerto Rico and the Dominican Republic, as explained in our YCC post on Wednesday.

Figure 2
Figure 2. The 11 a.m. EDT Friday, July 31, 2020, track forecast from the National Hurricane Center put nearly the entire U.S. East Coast, from Miami, Florida to Eastport, Maine, in the cone of uncertainty for Isaias. (Image credit: NOAA/NHC)

Entire U.S. East Coast at risk from Isaias

Tropical storm and hurricane warnings have been hoisted for the entire Bahama Islands chain and portions of the Florida coast, and it appears likely that nearly the entire U.S. East Coast will be under a watch or warning from Isaias at some time between Friday and Tuesday. The region at highest risk is eastern North Carolina, which on Monday may lie on the strong (right-hand) side of a potential landfall by Isaias.

Figure 3
Figure 3. Visible GOES-17 satellite image of Hurricane Isaias at 15:50Z (11:50 a.m. EDT) Friday, July 31, 2020. (Image credit: NOAA/RAMMB)

Satellite images on Friday afternoon showed that Isaias had a large area of intense thunderstorms, which were building over the center of circulation after it had been partially exposed on Friday morning by an intrusion of dry air. Isaias had begun bumping into a region dominated by southwesterly upper-level winds associated with a large-scale trough of low pressure. These winds were creating less favorable conditions for intensification, with moderate to high wind shear of 15 – 25 knots. Sea surface temperatures (SSTs) remained a warm 29 – 29.5 degrees Celsius (84 – 85°F), and Isaias was embedded in a moderately dry atmosphere with a mid-level relative humidity of 50 – 55%. Bahamas radar showed that Isaias had built about 50% of a complete eyewall.

Overall, these conditions favor only slow changes to Isaias’s strength through Saturday as the storm tracks to the northwest through the Bahamas and close to the east coast of Florida. Most of the intensity models favor slow weakening, but the official NHC forecast favors slow strengthening. A weaker Isaias will tend to track more to the west, potentially allowing a landfall in Florida, while a stronger storm will tend to feel the influence of the upper-level southwesterly winds on its west side, resulting in a more easterly track, keeping Isaias more to the east and preventing a Florida landfall. Unfortunately, Isaias is likely to pass close to the Bahama Islands hardest-hit by last year’s Hurricane Dorian, Grand Bahama Island and Great Abaco Island (Figure 4).

Figure 4
Figure 4. Predicted surface wind (colors) and pressure (black lines) at 18Z (2 p.m. EDT) Saturday, August 1, 2020, from the 6Z Friday, July 31, 2020 run of the HWRF model. The model predicted that Isaias would be hitting Grand Bahama Island in the northwestern Bahamas as a category 1 hurricane with peak winds of 78 knots (90 mph, purple colors) and a central pressure of 982 mb. (Image credit: Tropical Tidbits)

On Sunday and Monday, when Isaias is expected to turn more to the north and north-northeast as a result of the steering influence of the trough of low pressure to its west, the storm may experience a reduction in shear, to 10 – 20 knots (the technical reasons for this were well-explained in a Thursday night video discussion by Levi Cowan). SSTs of 29 – 29.5 degrees Celsius (84 – 85°F) – unusually warm for late July – extend northwards all along the coasts of South and North Carolina, so Isaias could be strengthening because of reduced shear and warm water as it approaches a possible landfall in the Carolinas on Monday.

Once Isaias moves beyond the warm Gulf Stream waters to the north of North Carolina, steady weakening is likely, with most of the intensity models and the official NHC forecast predicting it by then will be a strong tropical storm with 60 – 70 mph winds during its closest approach to New England on Tuesday.

Bahamas still recovering from 2019’s Hurricane Dorian

Isaias will be an unwelcome menace in the Bahama Islands, which are still recovering from the catastrophic impact of category 5 Hurricane Dorian of last year. After hitting St. Thomas in the U.S. Virgin Islands as a category 1 hurricane last August 28 and causing $150 million in damage to the Caribbean islands, Hurricane Dorian rapidly intensified into a category 5 mega-hurricane that powered ashore on Great Abaco Island in the Bahamas on September 1, 2019, with sustained winds of 185 mph. Dorian tied for third-strongest landfalling tropical cyclone in world history.

Figure 5
Figure 5. Hurricane Dorian on September 2, 2019, as seen from the International Space Station. At the time, Dorian was a category 5 hurricane with 160 mph winds over Grand Bahama Island. (Image Credit: Christina H. Koch/NASA)

At landfall, Dorian was moving at just 5 mph, and portions of Dorian’s eyewall lashed Great Abaco and Grand Bahama islands with category 5 winds for a total of 22 hours before the great hurricane finally weakened to category 4 strength. Dorian’s extreme winds, storm surge of 20 – 25 feet, and rains of up to 3 feet (0.9 m) of rain combined to bring the Bahamas their most devastating natural disaster in history.

A November 15 report from the Inter-American Development Bank put damage in the Bahamas from Dorian at $3.4 billion – over 25% of their $12 billion GDP, and their most expensive disaster in history. Insurance broker Aon put Dorian’s damages at over $8 billion. Dorian killed 74 and left 282 people missing in the Bahamas, according to reliefweb.com. The authors of that report said that as of May 20, water, electricity, sanitation, and shelter continued to be challenges on Abaco Island. Medical care is also a problem, particularly with the COVID-19 pandemic occurring. The Bahamas began seeing a sharp increase in COVID-19 cases beginning in July, and had 508 total cases and 14 deaths as of July 30, according to worldometers.info.

Figure 6
Figure 6. Visible MODIS satellite image of 93L on Friday morning, July 31, 2020. (Image credit: NASA Worldview)

Invest 93L off the coast of Africa unlikely to develop

A tropical wave with a well-defined surface circulation between the Cabo Verde Islands and the coast of Africa, designated Invest 93L, was suffering from high wind shear on Friday, and had only a limited amount of heavy thunderstorm activity, as shown on satellite images. The system was headed northwards into a stable air mass and over cooler waters, and it is likely to dissipate early next week. In an 8 a.m. EDT Friday Tropical Weather Outlook, NHC gave 93L two-day and five-day odds of formation of 20%.

A westward-moving tropical wave located about 1,000 miles east of the Lesser Antilles on Friday morning was producing a limited amount of shower activity. Some slow development of this system is possible as it turns northwestward over the western Atlantic by early next week. In an 8 a.m. EDT Friday Tropical Weather Outlook, NHC gave the system two-day and five-day odds of formation of 0% and 20%, respectively. Although the system has some model support for development, there does not appear to be a threat to any land areas.

The next name on the Atlantic list of storms is Josephine. The current record for earliest 10th Atlantic named storm formation is August 22, when Jose formed in 2005.

Thanks go to Bob Henson for assisting with this post.


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Jeff Masters, Ph.D., worked as a hurricane scientist with the NOAA Hurricane Hunters from 1986-1990. After a near-fatal flight into category 5 Hurricane Hugo, he left the Hurricane Hunters to pursue a...

276 replies on “Hurricane Isaias: Updates from ‘Eye on the Storm’”

  1. From my own memory, Tropical Storms Debby (2000), Ernesto (2006), Fay (2008) and others I can’t recall at the moment, which I’m sure you all can name, Isaias is one of the first weaker Tropical Storms to enter in that stage through Hispaniola and make it out in good shape. Turning into a Hurricane shortly after.

    I could consider Jeanne (2004), but that was a far more erratic track. Any other storm that has gone into Hispaniola as a TS while being able to survive that mountain and gain Hurricane status relatively quickly?

    1. Well, not Hispaniola, but Sandy hit the southeast coast of Cuba as a Cat1 and emerged thru the mountains as a Cat2!

      1. Thanks!

        Yes, slightly different though as Sandy was a Hurricane and the mountains in Eastern Cuba aren’t as massive as that mountain in the Domican Republic. Still, it was a very tough situation for Hurricane Sandy to survive and come out as a Cat. 2.

        Each one of these storms are truly unique.

  2. Japan Meteorological Agency
    Tropical Cyclone Advisory #9 – 9:00 AM JST August 1 2020
    TROPICAL DEPRESSION 03
    ———————————-
    South China Sea

    At 0:00 AM UTC, Tropical Depression (996 hPa) located at 18.0N 110.7E has 10 minute sustained winds of 30 knots. The depression is reported as moving northwest at 7 knots.

    Dvorak Intensity: T2.0-

    Forecast and Intensity
    ========================
    24 HRS: 19.4N 106.9E – 35 knots (CAT 1/Tropical Storm) Gulf of Tonkin

  3. TD10
    2020JUL31 234500 2.4 1009.0 34.0 2.4 2.5 2.5 NO LIMIT OFF OFF -15.93 -28.84 IRRCDO N/A N/A 16.35 20.27 FCST OTHER 30.1

  4. I need a Jeff Masters, Jim Cantore, and Rick Knabb walk into a bar joke. I’ve already written a few, they are funny. Yes we know if Jim’s there the hurricane is not. On the bright side he’s like trying to knock over a bowling ball.

    1. Jim’s the best, his contagious optimism is always nice to see. Hope not worry. That’s how we deal with 2020.

  5. Rick Knabb has been A+ for a long time. Weather Channel may get blasted, but they put experts on who give so much of what Jeff use to give at Wunderground. That’s just the truth. Don’t conflate the experts who support Jeff and Bob with the shareholders who are hopefully moving towards the truth too.

    1. Yeah I really like him on the weather channel. I also like the weather underground show they do every day.

      1. Obrigado, you’re too kind. It’s like an entirely different thing from “photography” for me. So still lots to learn. Tons of micro adjustments over those 589 exposures. And learning software, techniques, etc. It’s really quite an experience to watch clouds and towers over time using this method. I’m hoping to be able to do epic time lapse vids soon, we’ll see. Here’s to hoping! Cheers.

      2. Wow, you are really riding the edge with the exposure. Not an easy thing to do and you do it well. Do you colour balance in post or manually or let the auto setting on the camera take care of that?

      3. You notice, eh? Yeah, it’s hard to figure out everything in advance planning. I 100% white balance in-camera, manually. I don’t have a way to batch process for white balance, and I’m not loading+editing 600-1000 images individually, lol. I’m finding it depends on my exposure, my interval between shots, what my planned frame rate is for video. Which I partly plan based on cloud speed and such.

        But let’s say shooting every 4 seconds. Then I might be changing white balance by 100° Kelvin every 15 shots. Trying to maintain ‘exact’ timing, so clouds don’t get jumpy. Basically, if color changes 2000°K in 25 minutes during sunset, that’s 375 photos to allow my adjustment range. Sometimes sunsets can sway from 4300°K up to 8800°K. But I also sometimes alter my intervals. Like 7-9 seconds way before sunset. Down to maybe 4 seconds during sunset itself.

        I have to get that interval up to at least 6 or 7 seconds past civil twilight. Because my camera takes time to ‘process’ images before being able to shoot again. So, nearly-dark may require a 2.5 second exposure. Which takes over 4 seconds before my intervalometer/camera can shoot again. Nice when I have 5-second intervals, easier rhythm to make in-camera setting adjustments between my shots.

        Oh, there’s lots more. I adjust my contrast setting or dynamic range optimizer, as needed. Sometimes shift my white balance (by manually shifting to blue or red). Each setting needs to be made without interrupting shot intervals. So, frame1 I might change WB. Frame4 contrast. Frame7 exposure (shutter speed). Frame 10 maybe check my histotograms or alter my interval. Then frame15, start this sequence all over. For 80 minutes or whatever. With my second camera, maybe take shots in between as well.

        If I do it well, you shouldn’t notice. Like when nothing else is of interest but that one rising tower in this video… I slowed my shooting interval (since I cannot adjust my timelapse frame rate mid-stream) from 4s down to I think 9s. It sped up. Cheers.

  6. Major 115mph hurricane riding the coast from Space Coast through the Outerbanks should be expected, prepare now. Not going great in Georgia or S.C for Covid either, evac happens, be a good neighbor. McMaster doesn’t have to declare an emergency, we will watch out for one another. Most of us knew long ago he nor most of his ilk were with the people, no matter the D or R by their name.

  7. Logo
    Menu
    Jul. 31, 2020
    23:54 Z
    Map: Google Earth Logo Cesium Logo

    07/31 23:17 | 10 | 988mb | 70kts (72kts) | 73kts (73kts)
    Raw?
    Note: “In. Flt” is max inbound flight level wind. “In. Sfc” is max inbound surface wind, estimated by SFMR or visually. If outbound wind is reported, then highest wind, inbound or outbound from center, is in parenthesis. Winds usually averaged over 10s period. Extrap. MSLPs have (e) next to them. Add missed obs.
    Product: Air Force Vortex Message (URNT12 KNHC)
    Transmitted: 31st day of the month at 23:51Z
    Agency: United States Air Force
    Aircraft: Lockheed WC-130J Hercules with reg. number AF97-5305
    Storm Number & Year: 09 in 2020
    Storm Name: Isaias (flight in the North Atlantic basin)
    Mission Number: 9
    Observation Number: 10

    A. Time of Center Fix: 31st day of the month at 23:17:20Z
    B. Center Fix Coordinates: 22.83N 75.82W
    B. Center Fix Location: 167 statute miles (268 km) to the NE (53°) from Camagüey, Cuba.
    C. Minimum Height at Standard Level: 1,330m (4,364ft) at 850mb
    D. Minimum Sea Level Pressure: 988mb (29.18 inHg)
    E. Dropsonde Surface Wind at Center: From 200° at 10kts (From the SSW at 12mph)
    F. Eye Character: Closed
    G. Eye Shape & Diameter: Circular with a diameter of 13 nautical miles (15 statute miles)
    H. Estimated (by SFMR or visually) Maximum Surface Wind Inbound: 73kts (84.0mph)
    I. Location & Time of the Estimated Maximum Surface Wind Inbound: 9 nautical miles to the NW (309°) of center fix at 23:14:30Z
    J. Maximum Flight Level Wind Inbound: From 57° at 70kts (From the ENE at 80.6mph)
    K. Location & Time of the Maximum Flight Level Wind Inbound: 12 nautical miles (14 statute miles) to the NW (308°) of center fix at 23:13:30Z
    L. Estimated (by SFMR or visually) Maximum Surface Wind Outbound: 53kts (61.0mph)
    M. Location & Time of the Estimated Maximum Surface Wind Outbound: 7 nautical miles to the ESE (117°) of center fix at 23:20:00Z
    N. Maximum Flight Level Wind Outbound: From 203° at 72kts (From the SSW at 82.9mph)
    O. Location & Time of the Maximum Flight Level Wind Outbound: 6 nautical miles to the ESE (118°) of center fix at 23:19:30Z
    P. Maximum Flight Level Temp & Pressure Altitude Outside Eye: 18°C (64°F) at a pressure alt. of 1,518m (4,980ft)
    Q. Maximum Flight Level Temp & Pressure Altitude Inside Eye: 23°C (73°F) at a pressure alt. of 1,531m (5,023ft)
    R. Dewpoint Temp (collected at same location as temp inside eye): 15°C (59°F)
    R. Sea Surface Temp (collected at same location as temp inside eye): Not Available
    S. Fix Determined By: Penetration, Radar, Wind, Pressure and Temperature
    S. Fix Level: 850mb
    T. Navigational Fix Accuracy: 0.02 nautical miles
    T. Meteorological Accuracy: 0.75 nautical miles

    Remarks Section:

    Maximum Flight Level Wind: 72kts (~ 82.9mph) which was observed 6 nautical miles to the ESE (118°) from the flight level center at 23:19:30Z

    1. What the heck? Max surface winds are in the NW??? That is really weird as one would expect the max winds would be NE

  8. TROPICAL STORM CONDITIONS AND HEAVY RAIN CONTINUE TO SPREAD ACROSS THE CENTRAL BAHAMAS…
    8:00 PM EDT Fri Jul 31
    Location: 22.9°N 75.9°W
    Moving: NW at 15 mph
    Min pressure: 987 mb
    Max sustained: 80 mph

  9. Oh I am happy to have found this. I was bemoaning the loss of good weather nerdiness. This looks like pretty well organized storm for all of the difficulties it faces.

  10. Tropical Depression getting closer to Hainan island.

    China Meteorological Administration states landfall at around noon as a 30-35 knots tropical cyclone.

  11. for some reason my keyboard doesn’t come up when I click to leave a comment until I touch bold or italics?

    And it won’t let type in normal font.

    so I will lurk here until I figure this out

  12. Two CDO components want to meet in the middle tonight. Pressures with this blow up on east and west side should drop fast now where a CDO may try to form tonight. Twin blowups is interesting, but what will it mean?

  13. It looks like they shifted the “cone of uncertainty” a bit to the west along the Florida coast with the 5 p.m. update.
    In 2017 I was living in SW FLorida when Irma arrived. I didn’t evacuate, and I got lucky. Now I live on the Florida east coast, between St. Augustine and Daytona, so maybe I’m going to experience another “I” storm. This one doesn’t have the same menace as Irma, though, and I’m pretty confident that there’s no reason to leave. I’ve got all my hurricane supplies (no beer this time!) ready. Still, I wish it could do its turn to the NE a bit sooner and just give us a gusty, rainy day.

  14. FL Governor allegedly issued an Emergency Declaration for all counties along Florida’s east coast (on the Atlantic). If anyone can find that, could they please post a link? We’re already under a COVID-19 emergency declaration, but the wording of the actual declaration for the hurricane emergency will be important for several reasons. Of course, the governor is brown nosing at the White House right now so perhaps he got something in his eye and forgot to post it.

      1. Thank you. I’ve been watching his 2020 Executive Orders page where all the other executive orders are listed. Par for the course in FL, though. The info’s not always easy to find. Thanks again.

Comments are closed.