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Hoosier

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Everything posted by Hoosier

  1. Well, we've seen some outlandish model solutions for this one at times. Obviously still plenty of uncertainty but there's enough of a signal for an impactful event. At this time, it appears the southern half or so of the subforum is more favored, but we'll see how this trends in the coming days.
  2. 00z GFS continues with an impressive look for the storm next week. CCB on the order of 65-75 kts. Would certainly be a windy storm.
  3. 18z GFS still has the storm in the sub, so I guess that's good.
  4. Though lapse rates weaken overall with time on Sunday-Monday, do notice some pockets of decent lapse rates on Monday.
  5. The HRRR gust output has severe/near severe criteria winds with the line all the way from Oklahoma to Indiana.
  6. Getting a bit more interested in the area around where the triple point will be sliding through. This would be just behind the activity earlier on Monday.
  7. I'm sure the DC crowd likes the 12z Euro. Gonna be sad when Lucy pulls the football away.
  8. I think I had less than 12 hours of snowcover from last night's "event"
  9. Several GEFS members are jacked. We should at least have an anomalously deep system in the southern US. What happens after that is up for grabs.
  10. All else being equal, urban areas often tend to have sonewhat lower dewpoints than suburban/rural areas outside of a city, but I haven't heard of it materially delaying precip onset. I've actually heard some cases of the opposite, with cities causing enhanced precip there and immediately downstream.
  11. That 2002 storm was good in a winter that wasn't so good (outside of lake belts). I had like 8" of snow and a decent amount of sleet with minimal freezing rain. Believe that is the storm that ORD received 4" of snow in 1 hour.
  12. Please no. Her invading SNE a while back was enough.
  13. DVN did a little longer range discussion today .CLIMATE... Issued at 225 PM CST Fri Feb 24 2023 A pattern change occurred last week which put an anomalously strong upper level high over the Pacific and a deep longwave trof over the western CONUS. Analysis shows the Pacific upper high maintaining through early March before breaking down around mid- March in a potentially major pattern change. The MJO is forecast to restrengthens next week with the signal propagating into the Maritime Continent. This signal combined with the western CONUS trof indicates a very dynamic weather pattern for the mid latitudes across North America, and, the potential for developing strong extratropical cyclones ejecting from the western trof. The MJO forecast is to have it move from phase 3 through phase 7 over the next three weeks. These phases have the potential for warmer and wetter than normal across the Midwest, especially during phases 5 and 6. However, the lingering weak La Nina will likely cause some deconstructive interference. The Climate Prediction Center 6-10 and 8-14 day outlooks indicate a 33 to 40 percent chance of above normal precipitation through March 10th. Temperature wise the outlooks are mixed which is likely due to deconstructive interference with the weak La Nina. The CPC 6-10 day outlook has a 33 percent chance of above normal temperatures for the area but near normal temperatures for the 8 to 14 day outlook. Week 3-4...March 11-24 The Climate Prediction Center outlook shows a 70-80 percent chance of below normal temperatures. This signal indicates the previous alluded to major pattern change occurring around mid- March. As for precipitation, CPC has equal chances suggesting there is interference occurring between the pattern change, the MJO and the weak La Nina.
  14. Solid wind event shaping up for downstate IL/IN etc (more favored the farther south of I-80 that you go) on Monday. Less wind north as the pressure gradient will be weaker and by the time it tightens, the low will be weakening.
  15. A couple things. The better instability (though still modest) is actually progged to trail behind the wind shift/main area of convection. Would obviously be better if that were more aligned. That being said, the more I look at it, the more I'm thinking that this may just be one semi-continuous severe threat from the Plains into our sub without really having any kind of long break. Already mentioned the instability concerns but on the plus side, we'll have a deepening surface low through Sunday night and into Monday morning. That should force the low levels to remain mixed well-enough and minimize any stable layer at the surface as the main line/broken line approaches a given area. Also not dealing with any snowcover meltoff in the warm sector. Don't have sub-980 mb lows rolling into Iowa every day. Anomalous setups don't guarantee anomalous results, but it sure raises the possibility. So despite the timing being poor and issues with instability, I think there's a decent chance that some severe threat is maintained through overnight Sunday into Monday.
  16. Can't find it now but remember when I made that post about February not bailing us out one of these years? Who knew it would be this one.
  17. Most of the February low pressure records around the progged path of the early week system are from February 1902. Generally, they are low-mid 970s. There was a powerhouse system at the end of that month and into March. I remember reading an amusing account that some guy in Indiana thought his barometer broke because he had never seen such a low pressure before.
  18. I thought that one didn't get to 980 mb (or just below) until reaching the lake. Sort of splitting hairs I guess. Anyway, I was a very young kid at the time and have no memory of that storm.
  19. I wonder what the long range HRRR/RAP will come up with for the Monday system. Maybe a 968 mb low rolling into Iowa? Was thinking about it and I personally can't recall seeing a sub 980 mb pressure here. That tends to happen on the east coast, to the north of here, or out in the Plains. Do recall low 980s a few times, which is what the models currently suggest for mby.
  20. March 1998 had a little something. One of my favorite 2nd tier type storms because of the surprise factor.
  21. Cool I've seen crazy things like that with LES. One time I was on I-65 and it was snowing at a good clip in the field just east of the road with nothing in the field on the west side. Another time I was heading into Porter county. Roads were wet and then like flipping a switch, roads were suddenly snow covered in a good squall.
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