Here is what we meteorologists call the "spaghetti model", which is a misnomer. It's not one model, but plots a combination of track outputs from various models. The National Hurricane Center quite often "splits the difference" of these models, and issues a track that is the mean of the various models. However, if one model is shown to be outperforming another, they will weigh that model accodringly. The model with the best historical track record recently is the GFDL. That's the green line on the below graph. If you go to the parent website, you can scroll over the lines, and it will tell you the projected storm information, such as lat/lon, windspeed, and strength. I can tell you that the last plot on the GFDL- the one south of New Orleans- has the storm with sustained winds of 140 mph, which is a category 4 storm! While this is too early to tell if this will actually materialize, you can see why weathermen are concerned about this storm...