csnavywx Posted January 30, 2011 Share Posted January 30, 2011 csnavy, I'm thinking we could see some localized amounts topping 30" from the IL shore over into northwest Indiana. What say you? Along the lake? Absolutely. Some great delta-Ts behind this one, so no doubt we'll be seeing some lake enhanced snow or just plain lake effect after the synoptic stuff leaves. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
OceanStWx Posted January 30, 2011 Share Posted January 30, 2011 What do you think of the 18Z NAM height field changes? I'm suspicious. It had about 3 really good consistent runs, then this. I'll chalk it up to a one run stumble right now. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Thundersnow12 Posted January 30, 2011 Share Posted January 30, 2011 looks like some 2.5 inches amounts for me waiting for people to post more detailed info I'll believe it when i see it though 2.19" liquid PIA MON 7P 31-JAN -4.7 -2.1 1021 92 94 0.11 554 537 TUE 1A 01-FEB -4.9 -2.9 1021 92 54 0.10 554 537 TUE 7A 01-FEB -6.1 -4.5 1022 89 83 0.02 553 536 TUE 1P 01-FEB -5.0 -4.5 1020 89 94 0.05 553 537 TUE 7P 01-FEB -4.5 -7.1 1014 91 98 0.77 549 538 WED 1A 02-FEB -5.3 -9.6 1005 89 100 0.71 539 536 WED 7A 02-FEB -6.1 -14.4 1008 90 93 0.32 531 525 WED 1P 02-FEB -6.5 -14.3 1019 87 89 0.09 536 521 WED 7P 02-FEB -6.8 -13.2 1027 87 76 0.02 541 520 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
talaub Posted January 30, 2011 Share Posted January 30, 2011 It wouldn't be the winter season if this map wasn't any hooter than it, hotter than it is. Good one "Clark" Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
JoMo Posted January 30, 2011 Share Posted January 30, 2011 I hope that is more of a euphemism than a reality. I think the idea behind a winter storm warning is that it is already particularly dangerous, especially in the OUN area. I think it's going to have 'more dangerous' type wording. They are even mentioning the Blizzard word and mentioning Dec 2009 blizzard and how this could be as bad or worse. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
baroclinic_instability Posted January 30, 2011 Share Posted January 30, 2011 Hi BI, Congrats on your new job, You will be a gr8 forcaster as you are here! So Im currently thinking some colder air will make it further south to me, making this a more serious icing for us? Thanks I haven't been looking at detailed soundings in that location through the storm--I think BeauDodson may be your man there since he forecasts near that region specifically. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Hoosier Posted January 30, 2011 Author Share Posted January 30, 2011 LOT still going with up to 2 feet but leaving the door open for higher amounts. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
A-L-E-K Posted January 30, 2011 Share Posted January 30, 2011 LOT still going with up to 2 feet but leaving the door open for higher amounts. Hard to call for amounts well over the all time record. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
janetjanet998 Posted January 30, 2011 Share Posted January 30, 2011 ilx saying snowfall of only 6-12 inches and "up to" 12 in NW zones (me) Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
cyclone77 Posted January 30, 2011 Share Posted January 30, 2011 Yesterday's 18z NAM was a bogus run, so that makes you wonder about today's with the way things look. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Thundersnow12 Posted January 30, 2011 Share Posted January 30, 2011 AREA FORECAST DISCUSSION NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE CHICAGO/ROMEOVILLE IL 310 PM CST SUN JAN 30 2011 DISCUSSION 309 PM CST STRONG SFC RIDGE CONTINUES TO DRIFT SOUTH ACROSS THE CANADIAN PRAIRIES LATE TONIGHT AND STRETCH EAST ACROSS SOUTHWEST ONTARIO. THIS HAS PROVIDED THE CONTINUED THE LIGHT NORTH/NORTHEAST FLOW ACROSS THE SOUTHERN GREAT LAKES REGION. IN ADDITION THIS HAS ALLOWED A NARROW CHANNEL OF LAKE EFFECT SNOW TO TRAVERSE FROM NORTH TO SOUTH OVER LAKE MICHIGAN...PUSHING INLAND ACROSS THE CHICAGO METRO AREA. CURRENTLY NOT ANTICIPATING THAT THIS WILL PRODUCE MUCH MORE THAN A TENTH OR TWO OF SNOWFALL. TEMPS SHUD COOL OFF TONIGHT INTO THE TEENS/LOW 20S. CONSIDERABLE SOLAR FILTERING FOR MUCH OF MON...SHUD PREVENT TEMPS FROM WARMING BEYOND THE LOW/MID 20S. IT APPEARS ENOUGH DRY AIR WILL ENTRAIN INTO THE NEAR SFC ENVIRONMENT EARLY MON TO PREVENT SN FROM ARRIVING UNTIL MIDDAY MON. THEN ANTI-CYCLONIC FLOW DEPARTS AND ALLOWS ADDTL LLVL MOISTURE WILL POOL EAST AND RE-SATURATE THE ENVIRONMENT BY MIDDAY MON AND WILL THEN PERSIST THRU MON NGT. SNOW OVERSPREADS THE AREA MON AFTN THRU OVERNIGHT...AND QPF TOTALS APPEAR TO BE BTWN 0.05 AND 0.10 INCHES. CURRENT THINKING IS THAT SNOW TOTALS WITH THE FIRST WAVE WILL BE BTWN 2-4 INCHES. FOR NOW HAVE HELD OFF ON ANY ISSUANCE OF A WINTER WEATHER ADV WITH THIS FORECAST ISSUANCE. THEN THE FOCUS TURNS TOWARDS THE IMPENDING MAJOR WINTER STORM. TUESDAY THROUGH TUESDAY NIGHT... MAJOR WINTER STORM EXPECTED TO IMPACT MUCH OF THE GREAT LAKES REGION...WITH SIGNIFICANT SNOW ACCUMULATIONS AND CONSIDERABLE BLOWING AND DRIFTING SNOW TUESDAY EVENING THROUGH WEDNESDAY MORNING. HAVE UPGRADED THE WINTER STORM WATCH TO A BLIZZARD WATCH. SETTING THE STAGE FOR THE IMPENDING WINTER STORM WILL BE A PERSISTENT NORTHEAST WINDS TUESDAY MORNING. A BROAD SURFACE RIDGE WILL BECOME CENTERED ACROSS THE NORTHERN PLAINS AND STRETCHING NORTHEAST INTO SOUTHERN ONTARIO. THIS WILL AID IN TIGHTENING THE PRESSURE GRADIENT ACROSS THE SOUTHERN GREAT LAKES REGION...AND PRODUCING BREEZY CONDITIONS FOR NORTHERN IL/NORTHWEST IN. EXPECT THE BETTER WIND GRADIENT TO ARRIVE AFTER NOON TUE WITH A STEADY RAMPING UP IN THE WINDS AND TIGHTENING PRESSURE GRADIENT. SFC LOW HAS CONTINUED TO WOBBLE BETWEEN A MEMPHIS/INDIANAPOLIS/TOLEDO...WITH THE 850MB LOW TRACKING JUST TO THE NORTHWEST OF THIS PATH. AS THE SFC LOW CONTINUES TO STRENGTHEN ACROSS EASTERN TEXAS/ARKANSAS...GULF MOISTURE IS EXPECTED TO ENTRAIN INTO THIS SYSTEM. IT APPEARS THAT DURING THE DAY TUE A LULL IN THE SNOW WILL OCCUR...PRIMARILY BETWEEN 12Z AND 18Z. BY THE AFTN HRS THE LOW SHUD LIFT NORTH TO MEMPHIS WITH LGT SN OVERSPREADING THE CWFA FROM SOUTH TO NORTH. THE CAVEAT WILL BE THAT WITH THE PERSISTENT NE FLOW OFF OF LAKE MICHIGAN...WE MAY SEE LAKE EFFECT SN BEGIN FOR THE IMMEDIATE LAKESHORE COUNTIES MIDDAY TUE. CONDITIONS WILL CONTINUE TO DETERIORATE TUESDAY NIGHT AS THE LOW STEADILY LIFTS NORTH/NORTHEAST. INSTABILITY ALOFT APPEARS DECENT WITH CAPE VALUES AT 850MB PROGGED ARND 200-400J/KG LATE TUE NGT. THIS COUPLED WITH STRENGTH OF 850MB LOW...COULD PRODUCE SNOWFALL RATES FOR A PERIOD TUE NGT BETWEEN 2-3IN/HR. 850MB JET CONTINUES TO BE PROGGED BETWEEN 40-50KTS AND A MIXED LYR SHUD EASILY TOUCH AND FILTER TO THE SFC THIS CORE OF WINDS TUE NGT INTO WED. SO EXPECT SUSTAINED WINDS TUE NGT OF 20 TO 30 MPH...WITH GUSTS UP TO 45 MPH. THIS COMBINED WITH HIGH SNOWFALL RATES WILL PRODUCE LIFE THREATENING SITUATIONS WITH WHITE OUT CONDITIONS. ANOTHER BY-PRODUCT IS THE CONSIDERABLE BLOWING AND DRIFTING SNOW. TOTAL SNOWFALL IS CURRENTLY FORECASTED FOR THE EVENT IN EXCESS OF ONE FOOT TO SOME LOCATIONS RECEIVING UP TO TWO FEET. THERE CONTINUES TO BE A FEW MODEL SOLUTIONS THAT HAVE SUGGESTED SNOW RATIOS WOULD BE SLIGHTLY HIGHER...WHICH COULD LEAD TO STORM TOTALS MUCH HIGHER. CONFIDENCE GOING ABOVE THE CURRENT FORECAST IS MUCH LOWER WITH THIS FORECAST PKG. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
OceanStWx Posted January 30, 2011 Share Posted January 30, 2011 I think it's going to have 'more dangerous' type wording. They are even mentioning the Blizzard word and mentioning Dec 2009 blizzard and how this could be as bad or worse. My opinion there is word your WSW more strongly. I understand and support PDS wording for convective season, where watches are quite frequent in that part of the country. But WSWs already aren't that common in OK, so just by issuing one suggests this is particularly dangerous. I just worry because there is no national policy on that currently, and its use could get out of hand quickly. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
prinsburg_wx Posted January 30, 2011 Share Posted January 30, 2011 fwiw: 18Z RGEM at 48 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Kevin Askew Posted January 30, 2011 Share Posted January 30, 2011 I haven't been looking at detailed soundings in that location through the storm--I think BeauDodson may be your man there since he forecasts near that region specifically. Thank you BI, we have discussed it, its so close to call. Right on a thin line very difficult to forcast... Will have generator ready in case. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Moneyman Posted January 30, 2011 Share Posted January 30, 2011 Green Bay AFD said they expect the storm to head farther north and said the GEM may be onto something with the qpf shield. Here's what they say: ATTENTION THEN TURNS TO MAJOR...AND I MEAN MAJOR WINTER STORM THAT WILL STRIKE THE CENTRAL UNITED STATES TUESDAY INTO WEDNESDAY WITH SOME LOCATIONS EXPECTING OVER A FOOT OF SNOW. LATEST MODEL RUNS TODAY HAVE PUSHED THEN SYSTEM FURTHER NORTH. 500MB PATTERN INDICATING TWO UPPER LEVEL FEATURES. THE FIRST FEATURE IS ASSOCIATED WITH THE DEVELOPING STORM. THE SYSTEM FEATURE WAS MOVING DOWN THE BACKSIDE OF THE TROUGH. THIS FEATURE COULD HELP DIG THE TROUGH ACROSS THE ROCKIES WITH MORE RIDGING DOWNSTREAM ACROSS THE OHIO VALLEY THAT WOULD HELP PUSH THE SYSTEM EVEN FURTHER NORTH. ALSO...LOOKING AT THE BEST 850MB THERMAL GRADIENT WOULD SUGGEST AN EVEN FURTHER NORTHWARD TREND OVER THE NEXT SEVERAL DAYS. THE CANADIAN HAS TRENDED IN THIS DIRECTION AND HAVE INCREASED CHANCES FOR SNOW TUESDAY NIGHT OVER THE SOUTHEAST THIRD OF THE FORECAST AREA. OF CONCERN...ALL MODELS INDICATED A VERY DISTINCT CUT OFF OF THE PRECIPITATION SHIELD ON THE NORTHERN EDGE WITH VERY DRY AIR AT 850MB NORTH OF THE SYSTEM. THIS SITUATION IS STILL VERY FLUID... THEREFORE IF MY CURRENT THOUGHTS ARE CORRECT...LATER SHIFTS MAY NEED TO INCREASE AND PUSH THE SNOW EVEN FURTHER NORTHWARD. CURRENT DEPICTION OF THE SNOW GRIDS WOULD SUGGEST 1 TO 3 INCHES FOR GREEN BAY AND APPLETON WITH LITTLE OR NO ACCUMULATION TO THE NORTH AND WEST WHILE I HAVE 3 TO 6 INCHES FOR KEWAUNEE AND MANITOWOC COUNTIES. EVEN FURTHER NORTHWARD JOG OF THE SYSTEM COULD INCREASE SNOW TOTALS. AS THE SYSTEM PASSES TO THE SOUTH...GUSTY NORTHEAST TO NORTH WINDS ARE EXPECTED TO CAUSE CONSIDERABLE BLOWING AND DRIFTING OF THE SNOW...ESPECIALLY ALONG THE LAKESHORE. IF THIS REGION DOES GET 3 TO 6 INCHES OF SNOW...BLIZZARD CONDITIONS CAN BE EXPECTED ALONG THE HIGHWAY 43 CORRIDOR. SNOW WILL TAPER OFF WEDNESDAY MORNING ACROSS NORTHEAST WISCONSIN. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
turtlehurricane Posted January 30, 2011 Share Posted January 30, 2011 The sub-zero snowfall in ND is cranking, up to 4.5" being measured in spots now. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
baroclinic_instability Posted January 30, 2011 Share Posted January 30, 2011 Thank you BI, we have discussed it, its so close to call. Right on a thin line very difficult to forcast... Will have generator ready in case. Being prepared is the best way to go 18Z NAM for now should be tossed with its odd changes. Still a significant icing event either way. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
janetjanet998 Posted January 30, 2011 Share Posted January 30, 2011 DVN 329 PM CST SUN JAN 30 2011 SYNOPSIS A BROAD REGION OF WEST NORTHWEST 500MB FLOW COVERED MUCH OF THE NORTHERN U.S. FROM THE ROCKIES EAST WITH A DEEP TROF DIGGING SOUTH ALONG THE WEST COAST. AT THE SURFACE SLOW PRESSURE WAS TAKING SHAPE OVER THE SOUTHWEST AHEAD OF THE DIGGING TROF. OVER THE MID MISSISSIPPI VALLEY A WEAK INVERTED SURFACE TROF ORIENTED NORTHWEST THROUGH SOUTHEAST HAS BEEN WORKING IS WAY SLOWLY SOUTHWEST ACROSS THE CWFA. THE CONVERGENCE NEAR THE TROF WAS ALLOWING DENSE FOG TO FORM...DROPPING VISIBILITIES TO AROUND 1/4 MILE AS IT MOVES THROUGH. ..DLF.. SHORT TERM...TONIGHT AND MONDAY SURFACE WINDS OVER THE REGION ARE EXPECTED TO CONTINUE VEERING TO A MORE EASTERLY DIRECTION THIS EVENING AS LOW PRESSURE CONTINUES TO FORM OVER SOUTHERN ROCKIES AND SOUTHERN PLAINS. AS THIS HAPPENS THE INVERTED TROF SHOULD FILL ALLOWING ANY FOG DISSIPATE. A 300MB JET STREAK FROM THE NORTHERN PLAINS INTO THE GREAT LAKES WILL MOVE EAST OVERNIGHT. SNOW OCCURRING IN THE ENTRANCE REGION OF THE JET OVER THE MONTANA AND NORTH DAKOTA WILL SLIDE EAST AND SOUTHEAST REACHING THE MID MISSISSIPPI VALLEY BY MONDAY MORNING. THE SNOW WILL ENCOUNTER DRY EASTERLY LOW LEVEL FLOW AS IT NEARS THE REGION...SO KEPT POPS OUT OF THE FORECAST FOR TONIGHT. SNOW IS EXPECTED TO SPREAD OVER THE REGION ON MONDAY AS A WEAK S/W MOVES THROUGH THE REGION ENHANCING THE FORCING ASSOCIATED WITH THE JET STREAK. UPPER DIVERGENCE AHEAD OF THE WESTERN TROF WILL HELP SUPPORT ADDITIONAL SNOWS FROM MONDAY NIGHT INTO TUESDAY MORNING. THIS INITIAL ROUND OF SNOW IS EXPECTED TO PRODUCE A BROAD REGION OF 2 TO 3 INCH AMOUNTS OVER THE SOUTHERN THREE FOURTHS OF THE CWFA BY NOON TUESDAY WITH AMOUNTS NEAR THE HIGHWAY 20 CORRIDOR EXPECTED TO BE IN THE 3 TO 5 INCH RANGE. A WINTER WEATHER ADVISORY WILL BE ISSUED TO COVER HIGHER SNOW AMOUNTS ACROSS THE NORTH FOR MONDAY INTO TUESDAY MORNING. ..DLF.. LONG TERM...MONDAY NIGHT THROUGH NEXT SUNDAY ..MAJOR WINTER STORM TO IMPACT THE AREA TUE AND WED WILL BE KEEPING THE CURRENT WINTER STORM WATCH RUNNING FROM 18Z TUE THROUGH 00Z WED. CONFIDENCE IS INCREASING THAT THIS WILL BE A HIGH IMPACT WINTER STORM...WITH HEAVY SNOW AND BLOWING SNOW ISSUES OVER THE ENTIRE AREA ESPECIALLY TUE NIGHT INTO EARLY WED MORNING. ALTHOUGH LIGHT SNOW WILL BE ON-GOING MON NIGHT INTO TUE MORNING FROM THE PASSING INVERTED SURFACE TROUGH...STILL LOOKS AS THOUGH THERE WILL BE A SEVERAL HOUR CUT-OFF OF LITTLE IF ANY SNOW BEFORE THE SHIELD OF SNOW FROM THE ADVANCING SURFACE LOW OVERSPREADS THE AREA FROM SOUTH TO NORTH TUESDAY. FOR SIMPLICITY...WILL KEEP THE WATCH FOCUSED ON THE MAIN...STRONGER STORM LIFTING OUT OF THE SOUTHEAST AND ITS IMPACTS TUE AFTERNOON THROUGH WED. NO MAJOR ISSUES WERE NOTED WITH MODEL INITIALIZATION THIS MORNING. UPPER LEVEL CIRCULATIONS OUT WEST THAT EVENTUALLY MERGE AND INTERACT TO PRODUCE THE WINTER STORM WERE NOW ON-SHORE AND BETTER SAMPLED BY 12Z MODELS. LIKEWISE...NO GLARING ISSUES WERE SEEN IN MOISTURE FIELDS THIS MORNING. 12Z ANALYSIS INDICATED GULF MOISTURE...THAT WILL BE INFLUENTIAL IN THE VERY LARGE SNOW AMOUNTS...WAS BEGINNING TO BUILD ALONG THE TX COAST AS SHOWN BY 850 MB DEWPOINTS AROUND 10 CELSIUS AND DEWPOINTS AT THE SURFACE IN THE 50S AND 60S ACROSS EASTERN TX...LA AND SOUTHERN AR. 12Z MODELS ARE IN CLOSE AGREEMENT WITH A COMPLEX INTERACTION OF THE UPPER LEVEL LOW OVER CENTRAL CA PROGRESSING EAST AND THEN NORTHEAST...WHILE A SEPARATE SHORTWAVE OVER BC THIS MORNING DROPS NEARLY DUE SOUTH TO CARVE OUT AN UPPER LOW OVER THE 4 CORNERS REGION BY WED. THE CA SHORTWAVE IS SHOWN CONTINUING EAST...WITH THE HELP OF A 100 PLUS KT JET AT 300 MB APPROACHING THE CA COAST THIS MORNING...AND THEN EJECTING NORTHEAST AND STRENGTHENING INTO A CLOSED LOW AS IT LIFTS THROUGH MO THEN NRN IL TUE NIGHT INTO WED. THE BRUNT OF STRONG UPPER FORCING FROM POSITIVE VORTICITY ADVECTION AHEAD OF THE SHORTWAVE...AND JET COUPLET REGION OF SEPARATE 300 MB JET CORES OVER THE SRN PLAINS AND UPPER GREAT LAKES...TAKES DIRECT AIM OVER THE ESPECIALLY THE EAST AND SE HALF OF THE FORECAST AREA TUE NIGHT. AT THE SURFACE...LOW PRESSURE DEVELOPS OVER TX MON NIGHT...THEN LIFTS NORTHEAST ACROSS SOUTHERN IL TOWARD CENTRAL INDIANA BY WED MORNING. THIS IS ALONG THE LINES OF THE MORE NORTHERLY TRACKS SHOWN BY EARLIER ECMWF RUNS AND PERHAPS A BIT SLOWER. AHEAD OF THE SURFACE LOW...AND THE MORE NORTHWESTERLY TRACKING LOW AT 850 MB...A 50 TO 70 KT LOW LEVEL JET IS DEPICTED FEEDING GULF MOISTURE INTO THE WARM CONVEYOR BELT. THIS RESULTS IN SEASONABLY HEAVY MODEL QPF FIELDS IN THE LOW LEVEL DEFORMATION ZONE NORTHWEST OF THE SURFACE LOW...REACHING WELL INTO CENTRAL AND EASTERN IA TUE NIGHT INTO WED. AROUND 1 INCH TO NEARLY 1.25 INCHES IS SHOWN BY MODELS ACCUMULATING OVER MUCH OF THE FORECAST AREA BETWEEN 18Z TUE AND 12Z WED MORNING. WHILE SOME OF THIS MAY BE CONVECTIVE FEEDBACK...ESPECIALLY CLOSER TO THE LOW TRACK WITH SUFFICIENTLY STEEP MID LEVEL LAPSE RATES...GIVEN THE MOISTURE AVAILABILITY FROM AN OPEN GULF THAT WE HAVE NOT SEEN IN A LONG TIME...THE HIGH QPF VALUES CANNOT BE ENTIRELY DISCOUNTED. USING ROUGHLY 70 PERCENT OF BLENDED MODEL QPF AND APPLYING SEVERAL SNOWFALL TECHNIQUES...HAVE COME UP WITH SNOWFALL TOTALS IN THE RANGE OF 8 10 10 INCHES ACROSS THE NW HALF OF THE FORECAST AREA...TO 10 TO 14 INCHES IN THE SOUTH. THIS COULD OBVIOSLY BE EVEN HIGHER IF THE MODEL QPF FIELDS VERIFY. NUMEROUS TECHNIQUES...AND HPC FORECASTS... SUGGEST AN AXIS OF 15 TO 18 INCHES OR GREATER TOTALS POSSIBLE ALONG A LINE FROM OUR MO COUNTIES THROUGH MACOMB TO PRINCETON IL. MODELS ARE NOW ADVERTISING 20 TO 30 KT SUSTAINED SURFACE WINDS WRAPPING AROUND THIS SURFACE LOW AS IT PASSES TO THE SOUTHEAST TUE NIGHT. AT THE SAME TIME...850 MB WINDS PUSH 65 KTS FROM THE NORTHEAST. RESULTING WIDESPREAD BLOWING SNOW AND LOW VISIBILITIES IN THE PERIODS OF HEAVY SNOWFALL TUE NIGHT MAY EASILY RESULT IN BLIZZARD LIKE CONDITIONS...ESPECIALLY ACROSS THE SOUTHEAST HALF OF THE FORECAST AREA. MKX AND LOT HAVE UPGRADED TO BLIZZARD WATCHES IN ADJACENT FORECAST AREAS TO THE EAST AND IF THE CURRENT MODELS STAY THE COURSE...OUR AREAS AT LEAST EAST OF THE MS RIVER MAY BE WORTHY OF A BLIZZARD WATCH AS WELL. ALSO...ALTHOUGH NOT IN THE FORECAST... CANNOT RULE OUT THUNDERSNOW GIVEN THE SUFFICIENTLY UNSTABLE MID LEVEL LAPSE RATES AND VERY STRONG UPPER LEVEL FORCING TUE NIGHT. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Trent Posted January 30, 2011 Share Posted January 30, 2011 From CLE discussion: THERE IS THE POTENTIAL FOR SIGNIFICANT ICE ACCUMULATIONS OVER THE EASTERN HALF OF THE AREA. IN THE EXTREME...ICE ACCUMULATIONS COULD APPROACH THREE QUARTERS OF AN INCH WITH AN EARLY CHANGEOVER. With a region of 3+ million, this would be devastating. I can only imagine the power outages. If this does play out like this I don't think the region could handle nor do they have capacity to provide warming shelters for potentially hundreds of thousands without heat and temps falling to near zero. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
patrick7032 Posted January 30, 2011 Share Posted January 30, 2011 AREA FORECAST DISCUSSION NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE DETROIT/PONTIAC MI 417 PM EST SUN JAN 30 2011 .LONG TERM...MONDAY THROUGH SUNDAY MAJOR WINTER STORM WILL HIGHLIGHT THE FORECAST THIS WEEK. THIS STORM SYSTEM CAN BE SEEN ON SATELLITE CHURNING ACROSS CALIFORNIA/NEVADA THIS AFTERNOON ON WAY TO ROUNDING THE BASE OF AN AMPLIFYING WESTERN CONUS UPPER TROUGH. ALSO NOTED ON WATER VAPOR PIX IS THE NORTHERN STREAM SHORTWAVE SETTLING SOUTH/SOUTHEAST INTO MONTANA. WITH TIME...THIS FEATURE WILL DROP SOUTH ALONG THE ROCKY MOUNTAIN RANGE AS THE MAIN SOUTHERN STREAM STORM SYSTEM PIVOTS NORTHEAST IN ADVANCE OF IT. THE MODEL SOLUTIONS HAVE TRENDED FURTHER NORTHWEST WITH THE EVOLUTION OF THE OVERALL STORM SYSTEM WITH THE MAIN UPPER LOW LIFTING THROUGH THE MID MISSISSIPPI VALLEY BEFORE REACHING THE SOUTHERN GREAT LAKES AND THEN SHEARING MORE EASTERLY ALONG THE UPPER LEVEL CONFLUENT FLOW SITUATED ALONG BASE OF MEAN UPPER TROUGH CENTERED OVER EASTERN CANADA. THIS SHIFT TO THE NORTH AND WEST IS SUPPORTED BY A MAJORITY OF 12Z MODEL RUNS...INCLUDING A MAJORITY OF BOTH THE GFS AND GEM ENSEMBLE MEMBERS SO WILL ADJUST THE FORECAST AS SUCH. AS IT PERTAINS TO THE FORECAST...WILL BRING THE HEAVIER SNOWFALL FIELD NORTH THROUGH THE CWA AND EXTEND THE WINTER STORM WATCH TO INCLUDE THE NORTHERN CWA AS WELL...STILL TIMED FROM TUESDAY EVENING INTO WEDNESDAY. WILL ALSO HAVE TO WATCH FOR THE POTENTIAL OF SLEET/FREEZING RAIN MIXED WITH THE SNOW AT TIMES ACROSS THE SOUTHERN CWA (SOUTH OF DETROIT ATTM). SO FAR...IT STILL APPEARS THAT A MAJORITY OF THE PRECIPITATION WILL REMAIN SNOW OR A SNOW/SLEET MIX...BUT ANY ADDITIONAL SHIFT NORTH WOULD BRING A BETTER CHANCE OF ICY CONDITIONS. EITHER WAY...THE BOUNDARY LAYER IS SUFFICIENTLY COLD THAT THE RESULTANT MIX OF WINTRY PRECIPITATION WILL WARRANT THE CONTINUATION OF THE WATCH AS ANY REDUCING IN SNOW AMOUNTS WILL BE DUE TO GREATER ACCUMULATIONS OF SLEET AND/OR ICE. THE MORE NORTHERN TRACK OF THIS SYSTEM INTO THE FACE OF THE LARGE DOME OF POLAR/ARCTIC AIR OVER THE REGION WILL ACT TO TIGHTEN THE PRESSURE GRADIENT ACROSS THE AREA...SO NORTHEAST WINDS WILL BECOME RATHER GUSTY TUESDAY NIGHT INTO WEDNESDAY. WILL INCLUDE BLOWING SNOW IN THE FORECAST AND ALSO ATTEMPT TO DELINEATE THE PERIOD OF HEAVY SNOW...WHICH WILL SHIFT NORTH/NORTHEAST THROUGH THE AREA...FIRST ARRIVING OVER THE SOUTHERN CWA TUESDAY EVENING...ENCOMPASSING MUCH OF THE AREA OVERNIGHT...AND THEN FOCUSING OVER THE NORTHEASTERN CWA AS WEDNESDAY PROGRESSES. GIVEN THE AMOUNT OF MOISTURE THIS SYSTEM WILL PICK UP FROM THE GULF/MEXICO...STILL FEEL AT LEAST 8-12 INCHES OF SNOW SEEMS QUITE REASONABLE AND WOULD GUESS THAT A SWATH OF 12+ INCHES WILL BE POSSIBLE IF THE CURRENT FORECAST TRACK/INTENSITY OF THE STORM DOES NOT CHANGE MUCH. I am about to start looking at sounds but believe these amounts are under-done. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
csnavywx Posted January 30, 2011 Share Posted January 30, 2011 These forecasted totals are so high that I can't fathom them going much higher. One would think that we'd have to be nearing a theoretical maximum soon. I mean, we're already talking about a 1 in 50 year event (at the least). This storm has so many positives going for it. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
csnavywx Posted January 30, 2011 Share Posted January 30, 2011 These forecasted totals are so high that I can't fathom them going much higher. One would think that we'd have to be nearing a theoretical maximum soon. I mean, we're already talking about a 1 in 50 year event (at the least). This storm has so many positives going for it. On this note, something else I posted elsewhere about SLR: + Positives Very deep dendritic growth zone/ice crystal formation zone, in some cases approaching 400mb, especially early Wednesday near the peak. Very cold profiles (850s around -10 to -15C) Deep/strong and persistent omega field intersected with DGZ High wind shear aloft in deep DGZ will cause enhanced dendritic/ice crystal shattering, which will actually help seed snow production in the lower cold layers (seeder-feeder type process). - Negatives High winds and wind shear will shatter dendrites as they hit the ground, tempering the ratio somewhat. Compaction from large amounts of snow Still thinking an average of 16-17:1 after this all shakes out. I do think we could get past 20:1 in the early morning hours of Wednesday as the DGZ approaches 400mb and the peak of the storm arrives. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Hoosier Posted January 30, 2011 Author Share Posted January 30, 2011 These forecasted totals are so high that I can't fathom them going much higher. One would think that we'd have to be nearing a theoretical maximum soon. I mean, we're already talking about a 1 in 50 year event (at the least). This storm has so many positives going for it. Yeah, there's been some discussion about theoretical maximums in the past. It's hard to say. For Chicago, I've thought it was somewhere in the 24-30" range, and this one looks like it could be the one. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
A-L-E-K Posted January 30, 2011 Share Posted January 30, 2011 On this note, something else I posted elsewhere about SLR: + Positives Very deep dendritic growth zone/ice crystal formation zone, in some cases approaching 400mb, especially early Wednesday near the peak. Very cold profiles (850s around -10 to -15C) Deep/strong and persistent omega field intersected with DGZ High wind shear aloft in deep DGZ will cause enhanced dendritic/ice crystal shattering, which will actually help seed snow production in the lower cold layers (seeder-feeder type process). - Negatives High winds and wind shear will shatter dendrites as they hit the ground, tempering the ratio somewhat. Compaction from large amounts of snow Still thinking an average of 16-17:1 after this all shakes out. I do think we could get past 20:1 in the early morning hours of Wednesday as the DGZ approaches 400mb and the peak of the storm arrives. what badass negatives Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Hoosier Posted January 30, 2011 Author Share Posted January 30, 2011 fwiw, RGEM precip type at 48 hours Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
OceanStWx Posted January 30, 2011 Share Posted January 30, 2011 what badass negatives The negatives actually make the public impacts of this storm worse! The blowing, drifting and white out conditions are going to make travel, snow removal, etc. impossible. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
snowstormcanuck Posted January 30, 2011 Share Posted January 30, 2011 18z GFS roughly similar through 48. Looks a touch sharper with the s/w in the southern Plains. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Hoosier Posted January 30, 2011 Author Share Posted January 30, 2011 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
B-Rent Posted January 30, 2011 Share Posted January 30, 2011 Just woke up to see two facebook posts from TV mets in Indy (different station) One is talking about the stormtrack, and how the Indy area is looking at our biggest ice event since 04.... The other says the low has shifted W enough that the main threat of damaging contions goes from Laf to Fort Wayne. Talk about a confusing message! Sent from my Droid using Tapatalk Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Thundersnow12 Posted January 30, 2011 Share Posted January 30, 2011 18z GFS looks the same at 48hr Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Recommended Posts
Archived
This topic is now archived and is closed to further replies.