Jump to content

eduggs

Members
  • Posts

    5,631
  • Joined

  • Last visited

Everything posted by eduggs

  1. Eastern areas should get a little lingering daytime snowfall. But for many this will primarily be a nighttime event.
  2. It increased QPF in a few areas and decreased in others. Under a tenth either way for the most part. Like you say, almost identical distribution.
  3. I can't wait until we pass that magic MJO threshold from phase 7.9999 to 8.0000. Then we can snow!
  4. This event looks like a Miller A. The SLP develops in the South and moves NE up the coast with very little hint of transfer. There's no midwestern clipper low or primary transferring to a coastal low. That's pretty classic Miller A.
  5. Look at H5. The problem is not convection. Precipitation isn't generated by the L on the map. It's generated by vertical ascent, which is determined by the upper levels just like surface pressure is. So precipitation and SLP are caused by the same thing. The NAM run that was tucked had a much sharper trof. The weaker runs were flatter.
  6. It's interesting how people in different regions and based on different storms have such a different impression of individual models. People in the NYC, PHL, and MA forums have been praising the RGEM recently for its performance this winter. I think every model has its day. But it's never black and white. A model might nail one aspect of a storm in one region, but miss something else, somewhere else. No single model is best everywhere, every time.
  7. Looks too generous in CT. I'd cut those in half and knock an inch or two off RI and SEMA. Hopefully we double those tomorrow, but there's not enough support for big numbers right now IMO.
  8. More spread that any typical day, sure. But I would argue less spread than usual with a shortwave of that sharpness and implied sensitivity.
  9. When there isn't a discernable trend for several runs and there is also inter-model agreement, then we might be getting close to the final outcome. Antonio Brown would be congrats Buffalo one run and then what storm? the next.
  10. The 12z NAM is west of the 6z GFS and a few mb deeper. H7 does not look great on either of those runs if you want a significant snowstorm.
  11. Not a big surprise the NAM shifted towards model consensus. Subtle changes aloft make big differences at the surface.
  12. Guidance has been really consistent for days now targeting EMA. We haven't really had big swings with one run wrapping up into NH and then another skirting coastal NJ. I like that consistency.
  13. Interesting that the RGEM has flattened the trof for several runs now... slightly lowering the amplitude but with similar tilt progression and evolution. The vortmax was modeled in SVA, then NVA, then central MD. Higher amplitude is often better for stronger, tucked solutions, but in this case that puts the resulting SLP closer to our latitude. I'm still suspicious of the really close tuck on the RGEM, but the consistency is great to see. It's too bad all the precipitation is north and northeast of the SLP. The mid-level lows are still immature at our latitudes.
  14. The CMC is west of 12z, but not so much west of 18z. And if the upper levels on the CMC match the RGEM (can't view them yet), they may actually be less sharp than 18z. Nice run but unlikely to be indicative of a significant trend IMO.
  15. That would be pretty solid if it didn't include tomorrow's rain/ice. I'm seeing more like .2 - .3 for early Friday.
  16. The RGEM is the best looking of 0z. It looked pretty solid. But at H5 it was actually surprisingly a touch flatter than 18z. I don't completely trust the tucked look with the flatter H5, especially considering the rest of 0z. Regardless, it was a comforting run.
  17. I'd call this pretty decent model consensus and also pretty decent run to run consistency. I wonder if that means we won't see huge short term changes.
  18. That's a great looking run from the RGEM. With >12:1 ratios, arguably warning snows for all of SNE, plowable back to the west into NY, NJ, PA and also well up into NNE. Significant snows are still very possible, particularly for eastern SNE. One negative, however, is that this run actually looks a little less sharp aloft than 18z. I don't like the trend of flattening the trof, but I suppose it could also be indicative of the possibility that a tucked solution is possible without a strongly tilted trof. I trust the RGEM with tucked SLP positions a little less than the EC or GFS.
  19. I like the RGEM a lot. Definitely in the top 3 at 48 hours. The ICON is useful for trends. I wish they would release a hi-res version of the ICON like they have in Europe.
×
×
  • Create New...