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#1149791 (Received by flhurricane at: 5:00 AM 28.Aug.2023)
TCDAT3

Hurricane Franklin Discussion Number 31
NWS National Hurricane Center Miami FL AL082023
500 AM EDT Mon Aug 28 2023

Franklin has continued to improve in organization during the
overnight hours. The eye noted in the previous advisory has
occasionally cleared out on infrared satellite imagery, with the
cold eyewall temperatures surrounding it cooling to between -65 to
-75 C in a thick region around the center. Subjective Dvorak
classifications were both T5.5/102 kt from TAFB and SAB, while
UW-CIMSS ADT estimates are now as high as T5.7/107 kt. The initial
intensity was raised to 100 kt at 06 UTC, and that will remain the
intensity at 09 UTC. While this may be slightly conservative,
earlier aircraft data showed that the maximum winds were lagging the
satellite presentation and minimum pressure of the hurricane. This
intensity still makes Franklin the first major hurricane of the 2023
Atlantic hurricane season. Another Air Force Reconnaissance mission
will be in the hurricane this morning to provide an updated
assessment of the storm.

The hurricane continues to make a gradual turn northward, with the
latest motion estimate still north-northwest at 335/7 kt. Over the
next 48 hours the hurricane should continue to turn northward and
then north-eastward as it rounds the western periphery of a
subtropical ridge, and very little change was made to the NHC track
over this time period. After 48 hours, there continues to be
significant spread, especially in the along-track direction, related
to how much a mid-latitude trough ejecting out of Canada is able to
capture the hurricane. The big change this forecast cycle is that
the ECMWF has come on board showing a trough capture, though it
still remains slower than the majority of the guidance suite. The
latest NHC track forecast has thus been adjusted a bit north and is
quite a bit faster after 48 hours, but is not quite as fast as the
TCVN and HCCA consensus aids over this period.

Some additional intensification is anticipated today, as Franklin
remains in a low shear environment and is over warm 29-30 C
sea-surface temperatures. The latest intensity forecast still peaks
Franklin as a Category 4 (115-kt) major hurricane. However,
inner-core changes, such as eyewall replacement cycles, could occur
at any time, making it somewhat tricky to pinpoint exactly when
Franklin will reach peak intensity. After 24 hours, the broadening
wind field and relatively slow storm motion could make the hurricane
prone to some local upwelling. In addition, some northwesterly
shear may also begin to affect the storm. Toward the end of the
forecast period, more dramatic weakening is possible as the storm
gets swept up in the mid-latitudes. The latest forecast shows the
storm becoming a post-tropical extratropical cyclone in 120 h,
though this could occur sooner than forecasted if the faster
solutions, like the GFS, pan out.

The current forecast shows the core of Franklin passing west and
north of Bermuda in about 60 h, but a tropical storm watch may still
become necessary later today as its expanding 34-kt wind field to
the southeast does get close to the island after 48 hours.

FORECAST POSITIONS AND MAX WINDS

INIT 28/0900Z 27.2N 70.8W 100 KT 115 MPH
12H 28/1800Z 28.3N 71.1W 110 KT 125 MPH
24H 29/0600Z 29.8N 71.0W 115 KT 130 MPH
36H 29/1800Z 31.6N 70.2W 105 KT 120 MPH
48H 30/0600Z 33.2N 68.6W 95 KT 110 MPH
60H 30/1800Z 35.0N 65.7W 90 KT 105 MPH
72H 31/0600Z 37.0N 62.0W 85 KT 100 MPH
96H 01/0600Z 42.0N 53.0W 75 KT 85 MPH
120H 02/0600Z 48.0N 44.0W 65 KT 75 MPH...POST-TROP/EXTRATROP

$$
Forecaster Papin