Jump to content
  • Member Statistics

    17,514
    Total Members
    7,904
    Most Online
    CHSVol
    Newest Member
    CHSVol
    Joined

May Discussion


weatherwiz
 Share

Recommended Posts

Not sure that's a BD anyway ... Looking at NAM synopsis I'm seeing a close surface PP low that scoots out to sea in the morning and leaves everyone, top NE down to the south coast with N/NW flow. 

Which, honestly, if that happens that moisture/ceiling coverage probably busts too pessimistic and with 850s still in the +4 C and downsloping, it may bust warmer than MOS too. 

 

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

2 minutes ago, Typhoon Tip said:

Not sure that's a BD anyway ... Looking at NAM synopsis I'm seeing a close surface PP low that scoots out to sea in the morning and leaves everyone, top NE down to the south coast with N/NW flow. 

Which, honestly, if that happens that moisture/ceiling coverage probably busts too pessimistic and with 850s still in the +4 C and downsloping, it may bust warmer than MOS too. 

 

 

It’s NAm doing dumb nam things at 84 hours. Saturday’s a beaut. Tanning, pools, whatever folks want to do . I’ll be staining the deck 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

10 minutes ago, Damage In Tolland said:

It’s NAm doing dumb nam things at 84 hours. Saturday’s a beaut. Tanning, pools, whatever folks want to do . I’ll be staining the deck 

Mm.. no, that's not it either - it's not either NAM or bust pool weather.   ha - dude 

The GFS and the GGEM and the Euro ...and the Brazilian, and the Martians all show a closed surface low on a warm front that collapses S behind the low kink on the boundary, as a cold fropa, Friday night when the low passes by.. .

It's a discussion question that relates to the flow behind said low merely being NE on the immediate coast ( perhaps ..) but probably N/NW in the interior.   But, again...suspect the 850 RH is too high in backside NVA and downslope flow so... it may not be a bad day.  

When I think of a BDs slamming screen doors and whipping flags, I think of 82 F and 10 minutes later it's 63 and heading for 47, with shrouds of 900 foot torn strata filling in the skies.  That's a dramatic picture, but... having a low pressure with rain/thunder in the early A.M. depart with a low and having the region defaulted into a synoptic back side circulation isn't really a boundary slicing SW through the region in the traditional sense.  That's all... 

But, if you wanna swim in a pool in that weather and get blue lips ... by all means -   ...staining one's deck would probably work either way.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

9 minutes ago, dendrite said:

NAM is probably in left field, but it has NE sfc flow all afternoon. 

I dunno - in synoptics ...  hundreds of years ago when dinosaurs roamed... BDs were generated because of a v-max scooting into the Maritimes N/NE of Maine, and the backside NVA up that way piles up surface density and then mass-continuity requirements sends it rollin' on SW under the environmental flow that is more westerly down here.  

That's the gist of what we learned. 

This thing early Friday has that vmax, but what skews the definition/description above, is that surface low is already south of you and probably Kevin too, by Saturday morning, and heading seaward... Such that the whole region is in a synoptic wind field coming around the western side of the low (N). If the NAM is NE that's more ageostrophic compared to its own pressure pattern so agreed there.  So, yes and no I suppose...  

More typically ... it's in the 70s or something, and then the front intrudes and girls get purple thighs and stand with there arms crossed at bus stops in downtown Boston as one of these wicked witch of the north farts wafts thru.   

Link to comment
Share on other sites

2 minutes ago, Typhoon Tip said:

I dunno - in synoptic ...  hundreds of years ago when dinosaurs roamed... BDs generated because of a v-max scooting into the Maritimes N/NE of Maine, and the backside NVA up that way piles up surface density and then continuity requirements has it rollin' SW under the environmental flow.  

That's the gist of what we learned. 

This thing early Friday has that vmax, but what skews the definition/description above, is that surface low already being south of you and probably Kevin too, by Saturday morning, and heading seaward... The region is in synoptic wind field coming around the western side.  So, yes and no I suppose...  

More typically ... it's in the 70s or something, and then the front intrudes and girls get purple thighs and stand with there arms crossed at bus stops in downtown Boston as one of these wicked witch of the north farts wafts thru.   

You're looking way more into it than me. I'll admit I'm just being lazy right now and looping the sfc streamlines, low level RH, and 2m temps and not looking at the synoptics behind it all.

http://mp1.met.psu.edu/~fxg1/ETANE9_12z/etaloop.html

It's the d3 NAM so it's synoptically challenged to begin with. I just wanted to see DIT squirm a little.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

21 minutes ago, ORH_wxman said:

I know Tip is really hoping the GFS verifies next week...maybe some catpaws or noodles early Wednesday morning with 534 thicknesses on the departing backside CCB under the ULL?

 

 

 

May13_12zGFS168.gif

LOL...

Frankly, I like it for another reason having to do with vindication - sort of... This is a greatest example of seasonal lag around the Pacific pee puddle ( thanks Scott!!) we've seen since the odd, deep -spring frequency shift in snow occurrence that began after the super nino of 1998.  And the more this happens, the more it draws attention to the notion that this may be related to climate change ...which I personally believe..   

That all said, the GFS and the GEFs are both showing that cut-off as being more progressive during the week now.  I suspect we are at the onset of that become more a west-east trough but will take a few runs to modulate more coherently so.  In the meantime, this/that run is like a happenstance of numerical timing...where a little more progression aligned the wave spacing to unlikely phase with the N stream... I mean 3 or so degrees of latitude and timing and that interaciton can't happen out there ... Plus, the NAO is really not supporting that look - but may as well keep that tele-c out of it as it's pretty miserably handled as a general modeling rule. 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

4 minutes ago, dendrite said:

You're looking way more into it than me. I'll admit I'm just being lazy right now and looping the sfc streamlines, low level RH, and 2m temps and not looking at the synoptics behind it all.

http://mp1.met.psu.edu/~fxg1/ETANE9_12z/etaloop.html

It's the d3 NAM so it's synoptically challenged to begin with. I just wanted to see DIT squirm a little.

Can you ping me next time that agenda's both in play ... but routinely necessary ?   

  • Like 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

If that D4 Euro pans out off the SE U.S. we gotta give the operational GFS credit... 

It obviously was off with details along the way ...but it most certainly was depicting a cyclone closure with a warm or tepid -phased core developing in that vicinity, days before the other guidance. Now the Euro has a pretty clearly looking hybrid vortex there.  interesting.  Admittedly I thought we were just looking at typical GFS day-dreams on those older runs but heh

  • Like 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

1 minute ago, Typhoon Tip said:

Know what'd be funny ?   ...is if that feature developed and got captured by the ULL settling in and then foisted into New England...  

no one woulda saw that coming -

Congrats!!!

 

May13_12zEuroH5_150.png

May13_12zEuroSfc_150.png

  • Haha 3
  • Sad 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

For now I'm thinkin' it's all bs...  GFS run ...this Euro...all of them. 

The GFS is unstable showing now progressive continuity shift - which means, there's plausibility this speeds up more, and like I said...could be a prelude to this just morhing more into a west-east propagating wave.   

Meanwhile, the Euro deepens troughs and balloons ridges, too much beyond D4 as a general rule ... and this deeper complexion/look it has could easily be shaved off 6 or 10 dm and atone for that bias... 

So in effect, we are being dealt bullcrap for multiple reasons - pick your miss-direction.  we'll see

  • Like 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

2 minutes ago, Typhoon Tip said:

For now I'm thinkin' it's all bs...  GFS run ...this Euro...all of them. 

The GFS is unstable showing now progressive continuity shift - which means, there's plausibility this speeds up more, and like I said...could be a prelude to this just morhing more into a west-east propagating wave.   

Meanwhile, the Euro deepens troughs and balloons ridges, too much beyond D4 as a general rule ... and this deeper complexion/look it has could easily be shaved off 6 or 10 dm and atone for that bias... 

So in effect, we are being dealt bullcrap for multiple reasons - pick your miss-direction.  we'll see

Agreed. All these forecasts here of cold rains for a week and snows etc. All silly and tossed 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
 Share

  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.
×
×
  • Create New...