OT - Question for Weather Nerds

Anon1717806835

Well-known member
Jun 7, 2024
292
784
93
Its right amazing to me how accurate the models and projections have been regarding Hurricane Helene. That thing has been right on the money as far as where people said it was going to go. The models seemed to have this tract even before there was an Invest to start watching. Has forecasting gotten that good or was there something about the circumstances that made it easy to predict?
 
  • Like
Reactions: dorndawg

thatsbaseball

Well-known member
May 29, 2007
16,877
4,639
113
I think on this storm it's some of both. The models all came to an agreement a little earlier than I've seen at times in the past.
 

DAWGSANDSAINTS

Well-known member
Oct 10, 2022
1,872
1,646
113
Just hope it doesn’t shift anymore westward and impact St George, Apalachicola and Cape San Blas area. Michael just devastated that area in 2018
 
Last edited:

DAWGSANDSAINTS

Well-known member
Oct 10, 2022
1,872
1,646
113
Why does it appear to stall out over Nashville and then move westward on Sunday?
Hopefully it doesn’t take a turn back south over East MS and W Alabama and keep going southward.
 

IBleedMaroonDawg

Well-known member
Nov 12, 2007
23,939
8,128
113
It's never an exact science with hurricanes, but the upper winds make it simpler to project a path.


By the way, some place east of Tallahassee looks like it will be where it makes landfall tonight. I have a brother-in-law in Tallahassee, and a sister-in-law in Tampa.
 

Hugh's Burner Phone

Well-known member
Aug 3, 2017
4,482
3,797
113
Why does it appear to stall out over Nashville and then move westward on Sunday?
Hopefully it doesn’t take a turn back south over East MS and W Alabama and keep going southward.
It's interacting with other storm systems causing it to do that. Tropical systems don't have a means of movement on their own like your typical storm systems that are pushed along by the jet stream. They are acted on by other storms, high pressure systems, etc and that is what steers them.
 
  • Like
Reactions: IBleedMaroonDawg

whocanitbenow

Member
Sep 8, 2024
263
116
43
It's interacting with other storm systems causing it to do that. Tropical systems don't have a means of movement on their own like your typical storm systems that are pushed along by the jet stream. They are acted on by other storms, high pressure systems, etc and that is what steers them.
That's why if there's nothing to push them they just sit and spin, like Pnut
 
Last edited:
Get unlimited access today.

Pick the right plan for you.

Already a member? Login