Jump to content

Daniel Boone

Members
  • Posts

    3,517
  • Joined

  • Last visited

Posts posted by Daniel Boone

  1. 25 minutes ago, Jesse from KY said:

    I am just curious if NWS Jackson will upgrade some of the TN/VA border counties to a Warning.

    It's really puzzling they haven't. It's as if they've not looked at the Model's since the GFS showed the lower totals there. The NBM has heaviest there. Could be understaffed today or subs filling in . Alot if sickness going around. 

    • Like 2
  2. 1 minute ago, John1122 said:

    It looks like it in counties that touch 40 in East Tn and points south. The globals are the best case scenario, giving 12/13:1 over those areas but it lowers into the 10:1 range as the day wears on. The Canadian does the same. The hi-res models seem to see more warmth but it may be a bias with them. At one point on the NAM your area has 11:1 ratios and McGhee-Tys is closer to 7:1.

    Good points John. I know the Nam and HRRR have a warm bias here. Remember 21-'22 Winter my seasonal was 29.7". If the HRRR had been right it would of been less than 10 !

    • Like 2
  3. 1 minute ago, Carvers Gap said:

    It is a likely problem, and I believe this is why we are seeing SE jogs this winter.  It is like all of the model trends that we knew for 15 years have been reversed.   Modeling has been well northwest of where it should have been - almost like a severe Nina bias.   It can even be seen in LR modeling.

    Yeah, makes sense. Glad you thought of it. Good catch man. 

    • Like 1
  4. 25 minutes ago, Carvers Gap said:

    Nino climatology favors a more coastal track.  I sometimes wonder if these models have had three years of Nina tendencies plugged into their programming.....Nino climatology is a bias east, but modeling refused for days to see that.  I would not be surprised to see the bullseye end-up being western North Carolina.  The Piedmont isn't out of it.

    We do know each occurrence is ingested into the Model's. So, 3 Year's of Nina's.. probably so . 

    • Like 1
  5. The lower Snow Totals in the Valley are quite possibly due to the average difference in occurences ingested into the Model's. I.e,. say, Kingsport got 1 inch the last 3 Snowfalls while Knoxville got 2 , the Models over time will show Knoxville getting more in their output.  Of course, if any wind is forecast, downsloping will be as well. The City to City Avgs may well be factored in now . That I don't know. 

    • Like 1
  6. 1 hour ago, John1122 said:

    I've still got several papers from 1996! The "missing" and under reported snowfall amounts from that storm are legendary. To me, it ranks alongside the Blizzard of 1993 for local impacts. It was much worse than the blizzard on a state wide scale because it was a major winter storm for everyone. The Blizzard of '93 really cut off to a normal event beyond about Cookeville. 

     

    That report is waaaaaaaay off here. The 911 director at that time who submitted those reports to papers, quite literally didn't understand how to measure things. The same person reported that 10 inches fell during the Blizzard of 1993. Snowfall totals here were 16-18 inches. 16-20+ in Anderson and Union. 

    Same goes for here John. They listed Pennington gap with just 8 inches for the Jan. '96 Storm. I lived in downtown Pennington then and measured 13 inches while parts of the corporate limits had up to 16" and elevated areas of the County 18-24" with more mountain tops.

          The Feb. Storm produced 10" in downtown Pennington gap. I think that one is missing in the " official" Records along with several other Snowfalls that Winter. 

         I totalled 52" in downtown Pennington for the Season. 

    • Like 4
  7. 30 minutes ago, Carvers Gap said:

    I had to go look it up.  I read the article on WxBell about it earlier today, but there is the snow map I found....Interestingly, I think it came right on the heels of a cutter that hit Chicago w/ a big snowstorm.

    Screen_Shot_2024-01-10_at_2.17.37_PM.png

     

    Yeah, Chicago's big Blizzard back then . Over 20" there. 

  8. 9 minutes ago, PowellVolz said:

    That weird lollipop keeps popping up over Knox, Blount and Sevier Co. Kinda weird… it’s not every run but it’s been there about 50% of the time. Could this be some kind of backing or damming with the anafrontal moisture up against the GSM?


    .

    Model's have ingested data from previous similar situations. Could be those occurences produced more in that area, ie., Christmas 2020. That would reflect from the Model's output. 

    • Like 1
×
×
  • Create New...