Jump to content
  • Member Statistics

    18,609
    Total Members
    7,904
    Most Online
    masonj4
    Newest Member
    masonj4
    Joined

Pittsburgh/Western PA WINTER ‘25/‘26


 Share

Recommended Posts

7 minutes ago, colonel717 said:

I was deducting the 5 hours like I do from models thinking it was 10pm. I guess this is actual time which stinks and means I have to stay up. :)

You are right about that - it’s actually 10 PM Sunday. Same idea though - would be nice to get that kind of icing on the cake late in the storm. 

  • Like 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

.DISCUSSION...
KEY MESSAGE 1...
The Winter Storm Warning continues. Significant snow
accumulations are still forecast, but sleet and freezing rain
chances have increased in the ridges, particularly in northern
West Virginia.

The large-scale pattern as advertised by the model suite has 
not changed significantly with the upcoming winter storm. An 
Arctic cold front currently dropping across the region with a 
thin band of snow showers will have the main impact of 
introducing a very cold air mass back to the region. Upstream, 
shortwaves originating over the northern Plains and southern 
Rockies will begin to phase as they approach the Mississippi 
River Valley Sunday/Sunday night. Surface low pressure develops 
along the Gulf Coast Saturday night and lifts northeastward on 
Sunday, eventually handing off to a developing Atlantic Coast 
low by Monday morning. Inverted troughing pokes northward into
the Middle and Upper Ohio Valley Saturday night and Sunday. On
the eastern side of this, southeast flow and a decent southerly
850mb jet will support warming aloft mainly to the south and
east of Pittsburgh on Sunday. With increased confidence in this,
greater coverage and amounts of freezing rain and sleet have
been introduced. This is particularly true in the higher 
terrain of northern West Virginia, where one to two tenths of
ice accretion may occur, along with a period of sleet. This has
cut down the snow accumulations in this region. 

Overall, moisture and lift remain impressive overall with this
system. We still expect a coupled upper jet structure, layered
frontogenesis, and the inverted trough to support strong lift.
Precipitable water is forecast to reach around the 90th
percentile level as compared to late January climatology as
well. So, overall liquid equivalent totals of 1 to 2 inches are
still a good bet. With the further northward extent of warm air
aloft, snow-to-liquid ratios have trended down slightly, which
was the main factor in lowering storm total snowfall amounts.
Nevertheless, a widespread significant snowfall is still
forecast across the region with high confidence.

Here are the latest 48-hour ensemble-based probabilities for
48-hour snow totals through 7 AM Monday. They are similar to
previous model runs overall, but probabilities for the higher-
end accumulations have decreased slightly:

15":10-50% 
12":50-80% 
8": 75-95%
6": 85-100% 
4": 95-100% 

Given the lower expected SLRs, there remains a decent chance of
a heavier, wetter snow, especially near and south of Pittsburgh.
Also, given low SLRs and increased chances for freezing rain,
the chance of power outage impacts is increasing in the higher
elevations, particularly in northern West Virginia. We will 
need to continue to monitor precipitation-type trends and 
adjust accordingly. However, there is high confidence in Winter
Storm Warning-level impacts in any case. The timing of the
heaviest snow still appears to be during Sunday morning south of
I-70, and late morning Sunday through Sunday evening north of
I-70. Cold northwesterly flow and the crossing parent upper 
trough could result in lingering snow into Monday.

Continue to monitor the latest forecasts as this system
approaches, as widespread impacts to travel and daily life are
highly likely Sunday into Monday.
Link to comment
Share on other sites

53 minutes ago, Burghblizz said:

What’s interesting is that is actually early Monday morning. Doubt that exact thing happens - but directionally the GFS is saying that if we get the prolonged back end, there could be some high ratio snows. 

3Z Monday is 10 pm Sunday [5 hours ahead], so that would be between 9 & 10 pm on Sunday.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

15 minutes ago, Mailman said:
.DISCUSSION...
KEY MESSAGE 1...
The Winter Storm Warning continues. Significant snow
accumulations are still forecast, but sleet and freezing rain
chances have increased in the ridges, particularly in northern
West Virginia.

The large-scale pattern as advertised by the model suite has 
not changed significantly with the upcoming winter storm. An 
Arctic cold front currently dropping across the region with a 
thin band of snow showers will have the main impact of 
introducing a very cold air mass back to the region. Upstream, 
shortwaves originating over the northern Plains and southern 
Rockies will begin to phase as they approach the Mississippi 
River Valley Sunday/Sunday night. Surface low pressure develops 
along the Gulf Coast Saturday night and lifts northeastward on 
Sunday, eventually handing off to a developing Atlantic Coast 
low by Monday morning. Inverted troughing pokes northward into
the Middle and Upper Ohio Valley Saturday night and Sunday. On
the eastern side of this, southeast flow and a decent southerly
850mb jet will support warming aloft mainly to the south and
east of Pittsburgh on Sunday. With increased confidence in this,
greater coverage and amounts of freezing rain and sleet have
been introduced. This is particularly true in the higher 
terrain of northern West Virginia, where one to two tenths of
ice accretion may occur, along with a period of sleet. This has
cut down the snow accumulations in this region. 

Overall, moisture and lift remain impressive overall with this
system. We still expect a coupled upper jet structure, layered
frontogenesis, and the inverted trough to support strong lift.
Precipitable water is forecast to reach around the 90th
percentile level as compared to late January climatology as
well. So, overall liquid equivalent totals of 1 to 2 inches are
still a good bet. With the further northward extent of warm air
aloft, snow-to-liquid ratios have trended down slightly, which
was the main factor in lowering storm total snowfall amounts.
Nevertheless, a widespread significant snowfall is still
forecast across the region with high confidence.

Here are the latest 48-hour ensemble-based probabilities for
48-hour snow totals through 7 AM Monday. They are similar to
previous model runs overall, but probabilities for the higher-
end accumulations have decreased slightly:

15":10-50% 
12":50-80% 
8": 75-95%
6": 85-100% 
4": 95-100% 

Given the lower expected SLRs, there remains a decent chance of
a heavier, wetter snow, especially near and south of Pittsburgh.
Also, given low SLRs and increased chances for freezing rain,
the chance of power outage impacts is increasing in the higher
elevations, particularly in northern West Virginia. We will 
need to continue to monitor precipitation-type trends and 
adjust accordingly. However, there is high confidence in Winter
Storm Warning-level impacts in any case. The timing of the
heaviest snow still appears to be during Sunday morning south of
I-70, and late morning Sunday through Sunday evening north of
I-70. Cold northwesterly flow and the crossing parent upper 
trough could result in lingering snow into Monday.

Continue to monitor the latest forecasts as this system
approaches, as widespread impacts to travel and daily life are
highly likely Sunday into Monday.

1 to 2 inches of QPF. Fantastic.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

1 minute ago, southpark said:

1 to 2 inches of QPF. Fantastic.

QPF is the key so we are good even though totals might not be as much. Fluffy dry snow while easier to shovel settles in a day or two and we're pretty much where we'd be with lower ratios. Fluffy snow looks better for our totals, but lower ratio snow looks better for our base.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

4 minutes ago, TheClimateChanger said:

What time is the snow supposed to start? Looks like maybe some areas of light snow by 8 or 9 pm, but heavier and steadier snow holding off more towards 1 or 2 am?

NAM says 10 PM give or take an hour, and logs an inch by 3 AM.

GFS holds back a bit more and says up to an inch at 5 AM.  Starts around the same time but then takes a two-hour break.

These according to Bufkit data.  I'd imagine the best rates are early Sunday and then maybe again overnight into Monday.  We'll get a better idea with the higher resolution models, as has been mentioned.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

7 minutes ago, jwilson said:

NAM says 10 PM give or take an hour, and logs an inch by 3 AM.

GFS holds back a bit more and says up to an inch at 5 AM.  Starts around the same time but then takes a two-hour break.

These according to Bufkit data.  I'd imagine the best rates are early Sunday and then maybe again overnight into Monday.  We'll get a better idea with the higher resolution models, as has been mentioned.

 

WinterPrecipOnsetTime.png

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Just now, Ahoff said:

Now I’m confused was reading NAM was more south now it looks bad?

NAM was never more south. It was colder at first and then the primary held on and went too far north and transfered late. Is it right? Who knows. Looks like we have the usual warm tongue to worry about. RRFS looks better and maybe the hi rez will be better as well.

  • Like 1
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

×
×
  • Create New...