MichaelJ
Member
ExactlyThere is so much potential in the next coming weeks and important that we don’t get caught up on any one solution right now.
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ExactlyThere is so much potential in the next coming weeks and important that we don’t get caught up on any one solution right now.
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Oh ok I was confused cause the last line of your earlier post said you were interested in the system after the “ cutter “ . so really your interested in the 28th-30th system . We call that the 1300m system as he has been honking about that period for over a weekCorrect, there's no Christmas system. Yes, I said that there could be a Christmas system days ago, things change. It's better to be cautious/aware of something that could turn out to be something significant, whether it turns out to be right or wrong. The system after Christmas (the cutter) would be the one to watch out for.
serious question how do any of you KNOW the future? how can you say there is no Christmas system with such authority? i submit right now nothing may be showing on the models but in the real world of weather a storm indeed could happen.
We don't, but technology today allows us to predict the weather better than in previous years, and as time goes on, data will be added and algorithms will get better and better, hopefully. Unless you understand the pattern we are in perfectly and every system around the world and it's status, you can't just say it could snow on Christmas unexpectedly. Yes, it could NW trend on us, but I think this one's evaporating each run more and more, which in turn means that the alignment of systems in response to today's conditions will be off to prevent a storm.serious question how do any of you KNOW the future? how can you say there is no Christmas system with such authority? i submit right now nothing may be showing on the models but in the real world of weather a storm indeed could happen.
I think there still is a possible Christmas system. Some areas across the eastern US have a chance of snow in the forecast for Sun and Mon so there has to be some sort of possible system.serious question how do any of you KNOW the future? how can you say there is no Christmas system with such authority? i submit right now nothing may be showing on the models but in the real world of weather a storm indeed could happen.
Not to be negative Nancy and if that's the case. I'll go with cutter at this time. To many times I've seen how that battle plays out. Still a long way to go...Appears to be split almost 50/50 between suppressed, southern winter storms and cutters.
Edit: Or some of those other misses could be timing-related.
I'm guessing a fair amount of ice but still a stout mean no doubtThrough next weekend
06z
12z![]()
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Well, there was a wave coming down over the Lee of the Rockies that may have deepend a system via vorticity advection. But now, it's unlikely that a storm system will develop during Christmas.serious question how do any of you KNOW the future? how can you say there is no Christmas system with such authority? i submit right now nothing may be showing on the models but in the real world of weather a storm indeed could happen.
Well if it cuts, there's still a good chance of a Miller B and frozen precipitation in CAD areas. Some may think this is nuts, but I can actually see how there could be two rounds of wintry weather out of this with this being round one, and the potential for an even more suppressed storm behind it after 1/1.
Edit: In fact, some of the GEFS members depict such a scenario and some have two rounds of wintry weather before 1/1. Lots of possibilities...
The 28th-31st is starting to be a period we can pinpoint as a threat . The 1300m special
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Most members are much faster than that and focus on ilthe 28th-1stThe time period is more like the 29th-3rd.
Yeah will be interested to see how the eps trends over the next few daysIn ensemble land, that is honking the horn loudly for NC at this range. That's now 2 out of the last 3 runs of the GEFS with a mean over 3" at RDU. Granted some of that is probably mixed/sleet. Will be really curious to see if the EPS continues to tick upwards.
Yep the GFS utilizes a non-local mixing scheme which causes it to erode low-mid level temperature inversions too quickly and thus scour out cold air dams too quickly vs reality. The GFS also doesn't properly account for latent heating which matters wrt cad erosion in situations where there's freezing/melting hydrometeors inside the low level cold domeLol it plows the low into a 1049 high
Right....
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If we don't cash in here in SC in the next few weeks, we are doomed. Then we will be left saying "Maybe next year"
Omgd look at the ensembles it’s the same damn threat. Some of the members have a system the SAME system just early . It’s not a different system . There are timing differences but it’s all the sameWhatever happens between the 27th-28th isn't associated with the possible 29th-3rd threat. The possible 29th-3rd is a entire new system.
It's also worth mentioning for future reference that while the NAM is better at handling CAD than the GFS because it has a local mixing scheme and higher horizontal resolution, its utilization of the Betts-Miller-Janic (BMJ) convective parameterizatiom scheme causes the model to look for the level of free convection (LFC) & mix a layer that's at least 200 hPa deep if convection and precipitation is present (as is often the case in CAD). In CAD events low level mixing layer depth is often no larger than 150 hPa (1000-850mb) if that. Thus, the NAM also scours out CAD way too quickly just for a different reason than the GFS.Yep the GFS utilizes a non-local mixing scheme which causes it to erode low-mid level temperature inversions too quickly and thus scour out cold air dams too quickly vs reality. The GFS also doesn't properly account for latent heating which matters wrt cad erosion in situations where there's freezing/melting hydrometeors inside the low level cold dome
It's also worth mentioning for future reference that while the NAM is better at handling CAD than the GFS because it has a local mixing scheme and higher horizontal resolution, its utilization of the Betts-Miller-Janic (BMJ) convective parameterizatiom scheme causes the model to look for the level of free convection (LFC) & mix a layer that's at least 200 hPa deep if convection and precipitation is present (as is often the case in CAD). In CAD events low level mixing layer depth is often no larger than 150 hPa (1000-850mb) if that. Thus, the NAM also scours out CAD way too quickly just for a different reason than the GFS.
In ensemble land, that is honking the horn loudly for NC at this range. That's now 2 out of the last 3 runs of the GEFS with a mean over 3" at RDU. Granted some of that is probably mixed/sleet. Will be really curious to see if the EPS continues to tick upwards.
I imagine it’s much more difficult to fix than we think. So many variables. Once you change something it has a trickle down effect. I would at least think they could make one of the ensembles a “winter ensemble” that could focus on getting certain scenarios a little better than the op.So, with all these model biases, what keeps them for being fixed? I have seen changelogs of fixes, some minor, but then there are some things that are just permanent it seems. Are some of the issues part of the model's core that if munked with, they will break other main parts?
As a computer guy/programmer, I know sometimes fixing a bug will introduce lots of problems in the end, so I'd assume the same here?
One thing is certain, the Northeast will get buried in the next 2 weeksFun times ahead![]()
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Energy on the backside doing work . Frozen precip breaking out in Texas and Arkansas
I like your optimism. Can we make snow out of optimism?Gonna be a great euro run . Much different vs the gfs
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