Buckfever
Member
How is it looking for areas north and west of Atlanta like Dallas Georgia and Paulding County?Dry slot is less pronounced this run, ATL was getting sleet by 13z. Should do fairly well on the backside
How is it looking for areas north and west of Atlanta like Dallas Georgia and Paulding County?Dry slot is less pronounced this run, ATL was getting sleet by 13z. Should do fairly well on the backside
Probably too warm with the initial precip, maybe an inch or so on the backside.How is it looking for areas north and west of Atlanta like Dallas Georgia and Paulding County?
Yeah, that never made sense to me when less is required for an advisory from a winter storm criteriaKCAE as of now, has downgraded the Winter Storm Watch areas of the Central Midlands to Advisories, but have expanded them. Basically saying the guidance over night was warmer but its tricky.. and not sure enough to upgrade any area to a warning down here. Hopefully this is what plays out unless you're a psychopath who wants an ice storm.
Edit: i was made aware that an advisory is technically an upgrade from a watch.
Any insight you can provide as to why they are hesitant to pull the trigger? Waiting to see something specifically? ThanksHUN changed their mind overnight and no advisory or watch yet
HUN is less than impressed…. Guess I don’t blame them.Huntsville AFD
Beginning around or shortly after sunrise, boundary layer flow will
back to the north-northeast as the mid-level low and its related
surface cyclone accelerate northeastward in response to an amplifying
northern stream trough across the northern Plains. Resultant low-
level cold advection will lead to a gradual transition from rain to a
rain-snow mixture, that should initially begin across northwest AL
before shifting southeastward through the morning hours. It is still
unclear how much snow will accumulate on the surface given the
antecedent rainfall, but at this point we will maintain amounts
ranging from a trace up to one inch across northwest/north central
AL. Precipitation will quickly end from southwest-to-northeast during
the afternoon as deep-layer flow backs further to the northwest in
the wake of the departing storm system, but this will occur as the
low-level thermal profile becomes more conducive for very light snow
or snow flurries. Overall, it still appears as if the highest
likelihood for snowfall accumulations in the 2-4 inch range will be
across the higher terrain of southern TN/northeast AL, where a Winter
Storm Watch remains in effect. A brief period of light freezing
drizzle may also occur in this region, with glazing potentially
resulting in a greater risk for hazardous travel.
Not an event for HuntsvilleHUN is less than impressed…. Guess I don’t blame them.
Sure enough Apps runner…. Hard to believe it’s gotten to this point.Is the High to the north splitting our low in half? We really need the low further south View attachment 105851View attachment 105852
I sure hope so.I won't shocked if NWS Atlanta extend the WWA down to Henry, County, GA and southwestard.
I checked some observations around the metro, and the winds are already coming in from the E/NE 6 to 10 mph.I sure hope so.
That would be a rock-solid indicator that the wedge is overperforming. FWIW, I'm sitting at 35 just to your NE with what looks to be a solid cloud deck rolling in. I know, I know but when even one or two degrees makes all the difference when on the fringe, every little bit helps.
Usually, in freezing rain CAD situations, the freezing surface layer is scoured out top to bottom with the warmer air aloft and latent heat release. What's different with this storm in the CAD region is there will be a sub-freezing layer at 925Mb and at least close to freezing at 850Mb. With a screaming NE wind constantly feeding in, it'll be fascinating to see if we're able to mix that down to the surface and overperform greatly.
Is the High to the north splitting our low in half? We really need the low further south View attachment 105851View attachment 105852
Yeah. And some of those models showing sustained at 20-25 mph with higher gust as we approach go-time is something else.I checked some observations around the metro, and the winds are already coming in from the E/NE 6 to 10 mph.