cloudy72 wrote: ↑Tue Feb 01, 2022 10:55 am
GFS still looking lovely for snow lovers.
That pesky 800 mb (780-820 ish) level will be key IMO in where the sleet/snow line setups. That will be the main mesoscale feature we will need to monitor when the storm hits to see where the sleet/snow line will be.
Yep, been about the only difference the last few runs between the models , QPF is similar, surface temps are similar, but the 800-850s are not with when they crash to 0c. GFS and NAM are set in their ways. I think the last EU run slightly went towards thE NAM, so anxiously awaiting to see which way the EU trends
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cloudy72 wrote: ↑Tue Feb 01, 2022 10:55 am
GFS still looking lovely for snow lovers.
That pesky 800 mb (780-820 ish) level will be key IMO in where the sleet/snow line setups. That will be the main mesoscale feature we will need to monitor when the storm hits to see where the sleet/snow line will be.
Yep, been about the only difference the last few runs between the models , QPF is similar, surface temps are similar, but the 800-850s are not with when they crash to 0c. GFS and NAM are set in their ways. I think the last EU run slightly went towards thE NAM, so anxiously awaiting to see which way the EU trends
I agree guys. We get the warm nose for more ice / sleet and less snow, or the arctic air wins out and we get more snow ala the GFS and past UKIE runs.
Thursday will be the ultimate nowcast. Short term try and figure out but can only do so much. To me is seeing temps drop well below the 32 degree mark with tons of moisture still falling. Many times you see these kind of storms and temps can stay in that 28-32 range but what I see with all the models is temps below 25 most of Thursday while precip is falling.
tron777 wrote: ↑Tue Feb 01, 2022 11:18 am
12Z GEFS solution also holding...
GEFSMean.png
Individual members sure looked more north than this as a whole
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Former owner of Gut Feeling Forecast (GFF) and Doppler Infinity
I know just enough about weather to be dangerous!
My concern is looking at things historically. How often does the cold air win out in these overriding events in our area? More often than not the warm air is undermodeled. If I where guessing I would say the southern extent of the snowfall accumulations will be cut down by the warm air. I really hope I'm wrong. The GFS caught onto something yesterday morning and hads not budged. It's been very consistent.
Something to watch as well and starting overnight Wednesday with the second wave you will see a southwest to northeast band of precip. However as time goes on and the colder air sort of lays down on the north end you will start to see a more south to north band of precip. Where is that colder air to the north going to stop and again not sure how models could ever figure that out as mother nature will always trump the models. The system itself is not the strongest you will ever see but the amount of precip is pretty darn high for early February. So all in all models have been really good and not much in the way of changes since Sunday. Just the thermals are different and sometimes that is a bias of a model and sometimes certain models do better with the thermals.
dce wrote: ↑Tue Feb 01, 2022 11:42 am
My concern is looking at things historically. How often does the cold air win out in these overriding events in our area? More often than not the warm air is undermodeled. If I where guessing I would say the southern extent of the snowfall accumulations will be cut down by the warm air. I really hope I'm wrong. The GFS caught onto something yesterday morning and hads not budged. It's been very consistent.
Doug this happens quite often and usually because the low pressure is getting stronger than predicted. That could happen in this case but so far models are keeping the low weaker so this is helping us if you want more in the way of winter weather
I think models are similar overall with timing, temps and QPF output. This has probably already been posted. Do 850s crash harder like the GFS and UKIE or stay above zero longer like the NAM and CMC? Hoping the Euro edges towards the GFS of course. We'll see! That's the next one due up after 1pm.
Also watching the northern plains and upper midwest overnight and on Wednesday to see how the cold push of air is doing compared to what models are showing. This can help in adjusting the forecast.
4/10ths of frz/rain does not sound like a lot but it really is. A heavy frz/rain can help with the ice conditions but getting a steady light frz/rain for several hours as temps drop is a worse case.
dce wrote: ↑Tue Feb 01, 2022 11:42 am
My concern is looking at things historically. How often does the cold air win out in these overriding events in our area? More often than not the warm air is undermodeled. If I where guessing I would say the southern extent of the snowfall accumulations will be cut down by the warm air. I really hope I'm wrong. The GFS caught onto something yesterday morning and hads not budged. It's been very consistent.
I was just talking to my brother about this. Historically, it just seems the warm air wins out. It's happened time after time. Let's hope this one is different!
cloudy72 wrote: ↑Tue Feb 01, 2022 11:48 am
NDFD output as of 16z:
NDFD snow.png
NDFD Freezing rain.png
That looks similar to ILNs snowmap
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Former owner of Gut Feeling Forecast (GFF) and Doppler Infinity
I know just enough about weather to be dangerous!