lilj4425 Posted January 28 Author Share Posted January 28 2 minutes ago, WiseWeather said: Got the 50lb test line ready?? . Oh yeah. This one ain’t getting away. 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
BornAgain13 Posted January 28 Share Posted January 28 6 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
BornAgain13 Posted January 28 Share Posted January 28 6z GFS looks more realistic instead of 35-40" over more areas, its 15-30" depending on location. 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
BornAgain13 Posted January 28 Share Posted January 28 Wider View 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
lilj4425 Posted January 28 Author Share Posted January 28 5 minutes ago, BornAgain13 said: Still showing that dry slot over Upstate SC. It just refuses to get rid of that. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
sarcean Posted January 28 Share Posted January 28 9 minutes ago, BornAgain13 said: 6z GFS looks more realistic instead of 35-40" over more areas, its 15-30" depending on location. Nearly two feet in Raliegh is not realistic but it's promising to see on the map. 26 years ago Raleigh got 20 inches and that was the all-time record for single storm. Even a foot will shutdown the city for a week. 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
NorthHillsWx Posted January 28 Share Posted January 28 8 minutes ago, BornAgain13 said: 6z GFS looks more realistic instead of 35-40" over more areas, its 15-30" depending on location. Not many times we get to argue over 15-30” vs 35-40” clown maps within 3 days of a storm 6 3 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
BornAgain13 Posted January 28 Share Posted January 28 5 run trend of GFS 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
BornAgain13 Posted January 28 Share Posted January 28 Just now, NorthHillsWx said: Not many times we get to argue over 15-30” vs 35-40” clown maps within 3 days of a storm Very true. I need sleep lol 2 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
NorthHillsWx Posted January 28 Share Posted January 28 4 minutes ago, BornAgain13 said: 5 run trend of GFS Pretty dang consistent all things considered 3 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
BornAgain13 Posted January 28 Share Posted January 28 RRFS A , still snowing at the end of this. 3 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
lilj4425 Posted January 28 Author Share Posted January 28 6 minutes ago, NorthHillsWx said: Pretty dang consistent all things considered That southern line of the cutoff continues to move north though. 2 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Met1985 Posted January 28 Share Posted January 28 4 minutes ago, lilj4425 said: That southern line of the cutoff continues to move north though. You shouldn't be surprised. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
BornAgain13 Posted January 28 Share Posted January 28 6z GEFS 4 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
lilj4425 Posted January 28 Author Share Posted January 28 12 minutes ago, Met1985 said: You shouldn't be surprised. I’m not. Definitely moving the wrong direction. Need it to trend back south. 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Met1985 Posted January 28 Share Posted January 28 6 minutes ago, lilj4425 said: I’m not. Definitely moving the wrong direction. Need it to trend back south. It won't. Hopefully just slight movements north with such a strong arctic high. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
WXNewton Posted January 28 Share Posted January 28 GEFS becoming pretty consistent of the overall totals and area to be affected. Looks like major jumps, have turned into wobbles at this point. I would expect minor shifts each run, with the overall footprint starting to lock in. 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
WinstonSalemArlington Posted January 28 Share Posted January 28 BAM honks 3 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
WinstonSalemArlington Posted January 28 Share Posted January 28 GFS had last weekend’s storm two weeks before it occurred 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
lilj4425 Posted January 28 Author Share Posted January 28 Anybody got the AI Euro? Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
ADB83 Posted January 28 Share Posted January 28 0z WeatherNext 2.0. 1 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
SUNYGRAD Posted January 28 Share Posted January 28 general 4-8 inches with snow ratios, with higher amounts in Smokies, and along coast. 1 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
strongwxnc Posted January 28 Share Posted January 28 Area Forecast Discussion National Weather Service Greenville-Spartanburg SC 627 AM EST Wed Jan 28 2026 Key message 3: Confidence is increasing that a significant winter weather event will impact at least a portion of the forecast area from Friday night through Saturday, with snow expected to be the primary precipitation type. Due to cold temperatures leading up to the event, impacts to travel could be significant. An intense short wave trough/evolving upper low is forecast to dig from the Corn Belt at the start of the period, to the Tenn Valley by Sat afternoon before the center of the upper low passes over, or just south of our CWA late Saturday...becoming increasingly negatively tilted w/ strong downstream diffluence as time passes. The timing of the development of this diffluence will be key in determining the placement and timing of cyclogenesis near the Southeast Coast Fri night/Saturday and associated sensible weather impacts for our forecast area. What is becoming clear is that surface development will occur close enough to the coast to allow frontogenetically-forced moisture and lift to impact at least the eastern half of the CWA Fri night into Saturday. PoPs have been increased to likely in these areas by Saturday morning...with at least solid chances across the western half. In terms of the precip type, temperatures may borderline at the RA/SN boundary for some areas at the beginning of the event, but all locations should quickly transition to snow as cold advection intensifies on the west side of the developing cyclone. In terms of QPF, the general consensus among deterministic and ensemble guidance is in the 0.25-0.5" range for much of the area, with the higher end of that range being more probable along/east of the I-77 corridor. However, with forecast profiles quickly cooling to well-below freezing through a deep layer, and surface temps that are expected to linger in the 20s, snow ratios look to be higher than the textbook 10:1 rule of thumb with this event, with snow ratio guidance from the National Blend of Models suggesting ratios of 15-20:1 are very possible. Based upon the latest NBM probabilistic guidance...which is largely supported by the individual ensemble systems of the ECMWF/Canadian/GFS, much of the forecast area will likely see at least Advisory-level snowfall, with solid chances for Warning-level snow of 3" or over areas roughly east of I-26. Much of this event is beyond the short term...and so some degree of deterministic run-to-run model shenanigans are to be expected over the next 24 hours or so, with single model runs depicting jogs to the east (less snow) or to the west (more snow) to be expected, but the key point is that at least Winter Weather Advisory-level snowfall now appears likely across all but the western quarter of the CWA by the end of Saturday. 2 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
olafminesaw Posted January 28 Share Posted January 28 One limiting factor I noticed this morning is the low is pretty sprawling to start and takes a while to tighten up. The low track of the Euro is close to ideal ideal but suffers from slower consolidation than the GFS (a little further north than we would like as well) 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
strongwxnc Posted January 28 Share Posted January 28 SO67 VRB02KT 30.6F 0:1| 0.0|| 0.00|| 0.00|| 0.000 0:1| 0.0|| 0.00|| 0.00|| 0.00 0| 0| 0/0200Z 68 VRB02KT 31.5F 0:1| 0.0|| 0.00|| 0.00|| 0.000 0:1| 0.0|| 0.00|| 0.00|| 0.00 0| 0| 0 260131/0300Z 69 VRB02KT 30.8F SNOW 9:1| 0.1|| 0.00|| 0.00|| 0.014 9:1| 0.1|| 0.00|| 0.00|| 0.01 100| 0| 0 260131/0400Z 70 03003KT 31.0F SNOW 11:1| 0.2|| 0.00|| 0.00|| 0.023 10:1| 0.4|| 0.00|| 0.00|| 0.04 100| 0| 0 260131/0500Z 71 03003KT 30.6F SNOW 11:1| 0.2|| 0.00|| 0.00|| 0.019 10:1| 0.6|| 0.00|| 0.00|| 0.06 100| 0| 0 260131/0600Z 72 03004KT 30.3F SNOW 8:1| 0.2|| 0.00|| 0.00|| 0.019 10:1| 0.7|| 0.00|| 0.00|| 0.07 100| 0| 0 ----------------------------------------------+----++-----+-------------++--------------++-------------++-----------+---+--- 260131/0700Z 73 03005KT 29.6F SNOW 14:1| 0.1|| 0.00|| 0.00|| 0.010 10:1| 0.9|| 0.00|| 0.00|| 0.09 100| 0| 0 260131/0800Z 74 04005KT 28.5F SNOW 10:1| 0.1|| 0.00|| 0.00|| 0.010 10:1| 1.0|| 0.00|| 0.00|| 0.10 100| 0| 0 260131/0900Z 75 04006KT 27.8F SNOW 16:1| 0.2|| 0.00|| 0.00|| 0.010 11:1| 1.1|| 0.00|| 0.00|| 0.11 100| 0| 0 260131/1000Z 76 05006KT 26.7F SNOW 14:1| 0.1|| 0.00|| 0.00|| 0.009 11:1| 1.3|| 0.00|| 0.00|| 0.11 100| 0| 0 260131/1100Z 77 05006KT 26.3F SNOW 15:1| 0.2|| 0.00|| 0.00|| 0.015 12:1| 1.5|| 0.00|| 0.00|| 0.13 100| 0| 0 260131/1200Z 78 04006KT 26.0F SNOW 14:1| 0.3|| 0.00|| 0.00|| 0.019 12:1| 1.7|| 0.00|| 0.00|| 0.15 100| 0| 0 ----------------------------------------------+----++-----+-------------++--------------++-------------++-----------+---+--- 260131/1300Z 79 04007KT 25.4F SNOW 14:1| 0.3|| 0.00|| 0.00|| 0.021 12:1| 2.0|| 0.00|| 0.00|| 0.17 100| 0| 0 260131/1400Z 80 04008KT 25.6F SNOW 13:1| 0.3|| 0.00|| 0.00|| 0.022 12:1| 2.3|| 0.00|| 0.00|| 0.19 100| 0| 0 260131/1500Z 81 04009KT 26.0F SNOW 16:1| 0.4|| 0.00|| 0.00|| 0.022 13:1| 2.7|| 0.00|| 0.00|| 0.21 100| 0| 0 260131/1600Z 82 05009KT 25.8F SNOW 19:1| 0.5|| 0.00|| 0.00|| 0.029 13:1| 3.2|| 0.00|| 0.00|| 0.24 100| 0| 0 260131/1700Z 83 05010KT 25.4F SNOW 21:1| 0.8|| 0.00|| 0.00|| 0.039 14:1| 4.0|| 0.00|| 0.00|| 0.28 100| 0| 0 260131/1800Z 84 04011KT 24.9F SNOW 25:1| 1.0|| 0.00|| 0.00|| 0.039 16:1| 5.0|| 0.00|| 0.00|| 0.32 100| 0| 0 ----------------------------------------------+----++-----+-------------++--------------++-------------++-----------+---+--- 260131/1900Z 85 05010KT 24.7F SNOW 26:1| 1.0|| 0.00|| 0.00|| 0.039 17:1| 6.0|| 0.00|| 0.00|| 0.36 100| 0| 0 260131/2000Z 86 05010KT 24.7F SNOW 24:1| 0.9|| 0.00|| 0.00|| 0.038 17:1| 6.9|| 0.00|| 0.00|| 0.40 100| 0| 0 260131/2100Z 87 05009KT 24.5F SNOW 24:1| 0.9|| 0.00|| 0.00|| 0.036 18:1| 7.8|| 0.00|| 0.00|| 0.43 100| 0| 0 260131/2200Z 88 04007KT 24.5F SNOW 25:1| 0.9|| 0.00|| 0.00|| 0.035 18:1| 8.7|| 0.00|| 0.00|| 0.47 100| 0| 0 260131/2300Z 89 35010KT 23.3F SNOW 29:1| 1.3|| 0.00|| 0.00|| 0.046 19:1| 10.0|| 0.00|| 0.00|| 0.51 100| 0| 0 260201/0000Z 90 33011KT 19.7F SNOW 13:1| 0.2|| 0.00|| 0.00|| 0.012 19:1| 10.1|| 0.00|| 0.00|| 0.53 100| 0| 0 Some high ratio showing up for KHKY on the 06GFS. 2 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
WinstonSalemArlington Posted January 28 Share Posted January 28 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
eyewall Posted January 28 Share Posted January 28 At the surface, cyclogenesis appears likely just off the Southeast coast, where a weaker but still prevalent baroclinic zone is forecast over the Gulf Stream. The primary front is expected to be still draped across the Bahamas, setting up a probable instant occlusion low surface pattern. The low off the Carolina coast is expected to rapidly deepen Sat into Sat night, as stronger synoptic ascent overspreads the Gulf stream and the main synoptic front is pulled northward. On the backside of the low, an Arctic airmass will become locked in over the Mid-Atlantic as the low deepens off the coast, resulting in potentially record breaking low max temperatures during the event. This pattern is favorable for at least light snow with a high snow/liquid ratio within central NC, but also brings an incredibly difficult forecast challenge related to a deformation band on the north and west side of the deepening low. The likelihood of band formation, let alone its timing and placement, remains a point of considerable uncertainty and may not be ironed out until 1-2 days before the event begins. However, the top analogs and latest suite of 00z model guidance highlights at least the potential for significant snowfall totals somewhere from the Carolinas into the Mid-Atlantic. There are a few failure modes for this setup which would result in less precipitation over central NC. The first is the placement and the latitude the mid/upper level low closes; minor adjustments will have potentially significant ramifications on if/when/where the deformation band sets up. The second is that some degree of cyclogenesis will occur along the primary baroclinic zone over the Bahamas and may draw stronger ascent, moisture, and related liquid equivalent and snow amounts away from the instant occlusion-type, nearer-shore coastal low. 2 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
olafminesaw Posted January 28 Share Posted January 28 0z vs 6z EPS is a nice uptrend 4 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Louise Posted January 28 Share Posted January 28 1 hour ago, sarcean said: Nearly two feet in Raliegh is not realistic but it's promising to see on the map. 26 years ago Raleigh got 20 inches and that was the all-time record for single storm. Even a foot will shutdown the city for a week. Remember it well. We had blizzard like conditions! 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Upstate Tiger Posted January 28 Share Posted January 28 Key take away from GSP, “expect model shenanigans to continue”. 3 4 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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