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Typhoon Tip

Meteorologist
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Posts posted by Typhoon Tip

  1. 2 hours ago, Damage In Tolland said:

    What about those west ?

    Not sure.  I suspect we all dawn packed in but it will be diurnal inversion cap stratus.  

    The east wind direction will have a modest downslope aspect which then working with the intense solar max insolation we may see breaks opening up first west but then working E 

     

  2. NW massachusetts is sunny-ish ..

    The western side of this convergence axis is winning this thing now, as there's a definitive clearing line out there pressing E.   Hang on folks, there's an end to this madness. 

    The llvs will persist with the east shits through tomorrow as the seldom understood reality about SNE, being that we are decoupled from the rest of the planetary atmosphere ( jesus!) was clearly created by an asshole god on purpose.  Heh eventually that yields from the top down tho.  Monday's surface ridge settles finally E enough to veer the winds around...  Tomorrow and Monday will be two different worlds for folks E of ORH

     

  3. 9 minutes ago, WxWatcher007 said:

    It was a bad start to the day in Hartford and points east but who cares. That’s the pattern. 

    It's actually perfect to me ... it fits right in timing with my personal pattern.  heh.    Not a work out day.  No yard projects going on.  No other plans?

    I guess if we have to douche out a whole day, this would have been the day I picked.

  4. 6 minutes ago, FXWX said:

    It's fine in Burlington CT; mild and dim sunshine.

    Hey John  .. low grade heat wave potential, Tue-Thur.   By that we mean ... flirting with the big nine-O but could miss with upper 88's. 

    I don't see this as being a dewy heat - we'll see on that... Wet antecedence may contribute locally more so than transport with higher soil moisture after recent rains.

    But, the current machine numbers are likely a shade cool given the over-arcing synoptic look there. 

    • Like 1
  5. 11 minutes ago, CoastalWx said:

    Actually looping radar you can see the mid level forcing from SW to NE helping to enhance it. Just a good WAA push and a little deffy to squeeze it out.

    There's also some straight up convergence between about HFD and ASH ( axis ).  

    Look at the region sat loop you get a distinct impression of a general westward motion east of that line, and an eastward motion west of it. 

    Where in fact if Kevin drove 30 minutes west he'd be in brightening.  I think western CT is trying to salvage the afternoon.

    https://weather.cod.edu/satrad/?parms=subregional-New_England-02-24-0-100-1&checked=map&colorbar=undefined

  6. Well ...anyway, back here in reality ...

    That's starting to look more and more like a low-grade heat wave potential Tue-Wed-Thur.

    The 2-m products ( which are a joke, because they don't in fact actually ever represent the 2-meter slope temperature, but appear to stop/interpret the sfc as the 1000 mb level on the bottom of the soundings ) from the operational runs are already 85 to 87 on Tuesday and Wednesday...

    850s are marginal though.  14 to 16C ... but that appears to  coincide with favorably less ceiling/blocked insolation, all happening over a wind trajectory that is transporting a kinetically elevated air mass.  This has been sort of in the making for over a week in the telecon spreads, with a pretty strong -PNA.  It seems to be finally over powering this weird trainwreck thing we've been observing for the past week between here and lower D. Straight.  The NAO hasn't been hugely negative ...just sort of.  It seems some other emergence of the larger scoped synoptics is/has caused this semi-permanent grunge stalling in in the area...

    Anyway, 88 to 91 wouldn't shock me for those two days with Thursday a bit sketchy because a Pac front/convection my break the party at that time.

    And the upshot of this analysis is that I actually studied the guidance when drafting these projections ...

    • Like 2
  7. 30 minutes ago, Damage In Tolland said:

    Did you read anything I posted and what BOX put out this morning? All was unexpected

    WTF ...  I just bold' right back to you, what you posted about NWS

    SO yeah, I did -

    'showers are possible at any time'

    you seem to also be blind to content that proves, in objective clad black and white facts, your BS -

    I forgot to add that charm to that list of your accolades -

    • Haha 1
  8. 5 minutes ago, powderfreak said:

    I thought yesterday the rain looked to back decently west too on a lot of models

    I wasn’t sure where the east only or Dendrite only was coming from except for “positive thinking” like you said.

    Its onshore flow and wedged, easy to see it being chilly and damp.

    12z Euro run yesterday looked regionwide showery.

    -----

    GGEM rotating stuff inward.

     

     

    Ha ha ha :lol: to say nothing of the fact that Dendrite only must somehow be construed as a positive thing when it comes to turd weather -

  9. 21 minutes ago, Damage In Tolland said:

    At 18z models were mainly dry and had it all east. Instead it’s going be dry there and pour all day here. Radar looks like .50 or more . Even this morning BOX had it dry here and raining EMA. Busts all around 

    General thinking is showers are possible in any
    location, but will be more widespread east of the Worcester metro
    area. In fact, the CT River Valley may "luck out" with a primarily
    dry day as weak high pressure attempts to nudge in from the
    southwest. While it will a dreary and rather chilly day, with little
    to no diurnal swing in temps from current obs (in the 50s and
    low 60s, west), QPF will be minimal, with HREF ensemble mean
    QPF around 0.1" across Middlesex and Essex Counties. Should high
    pressure be able to scatter out a few breaks of sunshine across
    western MA, could see temps warm briefly into the mid to upper
    60s in places like Hartford and Springfield.

    You need reality scope checks ... badly. 

    First of all, in interpreting Met discussions ... that bold statement counts.  It was possible to do what it is doing.  That does not mean, mainly dry in concept or intent - neither. 

    There's thinking positive' but you have to do it from a position of objective plausibility - not just because it is what one wants.  Lol. 

    Secondly, "the 18z runs" don't mean jack shit when there's run after run after run signifying something else when taking their ( duh ) aggregated mean.  But ... just for shits 'n' giggles, that is not true about the 18z runs, yesterday, anyway, when taking that single run cycle in a vacuum:

    image.png.c66d8c6d8c27dd326d7d7bf533fff677.png

    Like I said, as this series ( 18z run yesterday ) clearly shows... the GFS busted but the other guidance has QPF plugging into the region from just about exactly what you see happening in the now-cast/synoptics at this time.  Bravo all guidance except the GFS.

    See... (this goes without saying at this point) ... you don't actually look at the guidance.  I think you sometimes gather what the guidance must "seem" like just based on something like ... I dunno, the mood-tenor of the moment from the shenanigans in here.  That's a social awareness - I'll give that. But it is exceedingly error prone in the long run and gets you into trouble, because you make statements that are patently incorrect, like, "At 18z models were mainly dry... "

    It's all good though... you're the class clown.  They serve a purpose too -

     

    • Haha 5
  10. Interesting little short term battle between the this new 18z GFS vs everything else for SNE for tomorrow.  

    GFS is gray but dry...probably a little milder by virtue of being so.  Perhaps a little drizzle on the immediate shore points.  Maybe some breaks in ceiling out CT and western MA.

    everything else squares the day into the dumpster with steady light rain shut in weather. 

  11. 2 minutes ago, Damage In Tolland said:

    It will be better here than Dendyland. Won’t be sunny , but breaks and no rain here vs washout and cold up there. 

    It may not rain 'up here' though, ... much.   I mean drizzle passing here and there but primarily dry.  There's no real means to provide lift, and most likely where the models have the stationary very light QPF blob parked over eastern zones that's just the land/sea convergence over sensitive in the runs. 

    It may also start to sag south during the afternoon.  Sort of like what happened yesterday.   It'll be a cooler air mass everywhere though.  It's a matter of how much.

  12. All seriousness ... ( and tedium ), it's a nice out there today.

    70 here.  I'm noticing that the CU trajectory and the llw wind is actually more NE were I am here in N . Middlesex in east central Mass.  That's technically not a marine flow here.  With sat presentation showing only micro fluffies getting in the way of the sun, we're probably going to be just fine this mid day.  Maybe the s-breeze mechanics overwhelm late in the day. 

    I also noticed the 12z NAM is a little better for Sunday. It's probably going to be cooler coast, warmer deep interior type thing.  Could see that being 63 here and 53 at Logan.  ...75 in ALB.   With sun around.  That's a better scenario than prior run.

     

  13. It's almost like the GFS' physics cause these analogous 'Jovian' like fixed spots.  Vortex modes, and the rest of the atmosphere just starts moving around them.

    We happen to be stuck with one SE of L.I. ...

    Not saying its even wrong, necessarily.  There's currently a festering llv gunk low there this morning, helping to send <700mb slab back west into the region.  It seems to be all but entirely uncoupled to the mid and upper air synoptics.  Something about the llv mass field circulation medium is forcing that    interesting

    • Confused 1
  14. 42 minutes ago, SouthCoastMA said:

    Wouldn't surprise me one bit. Here's another one for some laughs

    image.png.f62f5faebc81d0d9ceb0819e23063791.png

     

    That's a bit different circumstance, though. The Euro I was using to commiserate was D8.5

    This above is typical of the GFS at that range. ... just humoring a 372 hour chart for a moment... 

    It seems like a transfixed result of the model, where out around further ranges it (perhaps) loses all other driving forcing ... allowing the underlying Labrodorian cold climate sink as an actual atmospheric footprint. I mean really, just imagine for a moment we remove the land from the map, that's indistinguishable from a the Labrador current's cold SST termination waters. Which by the way, that depiction is colder than the current, too.  It would have a cold offset regardless of its own rancid low.

    ( That latter fact sometimes makes me wonder if it is exposing some of the modeling strategy at NCEP where they may in fact be initializing grids based on climate.  The Lab current has been notably getting warmer in the last 10 years in particular ...etc. )

    Not just with that aspect.  I've noticed the GFS is the wrong model - always - to ever detect heat at extended leads. It's like they templated the model to hide CC  LOL    ( little sarcasm there..)

     

  15. 33 minutes ago, CoastalWx said:

    Wow, Houston got fucked. And now the Nam tries to fuck the weekend.

    Frankly it looks like all models were festering that low level grunge low E of NJ, while S of modest +PP layout over NS - hold just enough differential static for 2 days it sends pulses of low level Labradorian ass vomit all weekend long. I'm like ... really -

    They weren't ever ideal for the weekend in prior runs, but they're coalescing around that idea now doesn't seem like physics. LOL.  And this is infuriating looking ... because it's hard to find any kind of mid and upper support for that "anchor" low.  And it's not even deep. It's like 1009 mb ... barely lower than standard sea-level, yet it keeps us in the 50s ...

    I gotta say though, we were supposed to be locked in the 50s in the 2-meter progs from the Euro, yesterday, yet we had a gorgeous sunny mid to late afternoon into early evening and temps recovered to 70 for a high.  It's probably grasping for hope to say so but it could be a prelude to these models over doing it.  

    It's really sensitive around here.... the ocean being 44 F while the 850s over land support 72 makes for some whiplash error potential.  All depends which 10 minutes of W or E wind is in place.

    • Like 1
  16. 34 minutes ago, cleetussnow said:

    You installers should consider mini splits.  I had window and wall mount ACs in my older home which is steam heat, no ducting.  3 yrs ago I installed 1 mini split with 2 heads and I will never look back at windows again.  How many heads you need is going to vary house to house of course.  I had mine installed professionally (huge BTU unit), but you can buy DIY kits and it doesn't seem too hard for a middle of the roader handyman.  I could have done a small single head.   I spend about 20% less for cooling season, but the house is way more comfortable.  Those things dehumidify especially well.  They also heat - shoulder season it's cheaper than oil for sure. 

    I also recommend an electric heat pump water heater if you need to replace an electric one and you don't have gas.  Keeps my basement cool and dry all year, and cheap hot water to boot!

    I'm getting an estimate at the end of the month.

    It's not just about the installation.  That too, but mostly it's about a fraction of the per annum energy cost to heat and cool the edifice of the home. 

    Plus the sound controls.  Jesus. Install A.C.s that don't sound like an emissions control test at an aeronautical proving ground cost a lot, plus are less efficient to even run.   In the winter, my house has electric base board heaters.  redic

    • Like 2
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