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Jan Medium/Long Range Disco: Winter is coming


stormtracker
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Makes sense the GFS shows it being a bit more south. It pushes the cold down more and storms track along the that gradient. It’s gonna move around more as models figure out the confluence, cold press, NS vort etc. 
 
Just one run to file away as a possible outcome. It’s not the final one 

The 12z euro will be telling.
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Just now, BristowWx said:

Imagine we still are in ensemble mode today and tomorrow.  

you should be in ensemble mode until like 48-72 hours out

the signal for a potentially significant storm is still there. from like BOS to you guys. just use ensembles and keep your nerves lmao

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Just now, brooklynwx99 said:

you should be in ensemble mode until like 48-72 hours out

the signal for a potentially significant storm is still there. from like BOS to you guys. just use ensembles and keep your nerves lmao

about how many hours out would you recommend tracking geese migrations?

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8 minutes ago, LeesburgWx said:

This thread is unreal. GFS looks great at this juncture and you would think it took the storm away reading the posts in here

Agreed. People trying to parse where banding and the precip shield will be at this point is ridiculous. Just look at the storm track and you know everyone would get their share with the GFS depiction. It is a pretty quick mover which should bring down totals. But as depicted its a beaut. 

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1 minute ago, NorthArlington101 said:

It may be semantics, but for a storm without "HECS" upside, I see a few HECS (my definition at least - zones of 18"+) in the GEFS.

I believe I see some “tucks” in a few of them.

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14 minutes ago, brooklynwx99 said:

you should be in ensemble mode until like 48-72 hours out

the signal for a potentially significant storm is still there. from like BOS to you guys. just use ensembles and keep your nerves lmao

I agree to 72 hours or so, but there also is a tendency for follow the leader with the ops and ensembles lately. Maybe someone like @high risk or @dtk can speak to studies of how nondispersive they seem to be in recent years.

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2 minutes ago, Terpeast said:

Note the trend of the cold HP strength up top on the gefs

IMG_5845.thumb.gif.0a0e0e409b756cff5269db82f37f71f8.gif

This was what I wanted to see. A better in-situ signature on the lead will work wonders for the initial precip, as well as maintaining a decent PBL profile during any storm height. There's some serious members too on that high. Saw some 1035mb or so readings when looking at the member plots. Great to see. 

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