
snowlover91
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Everything posted by snowlover91
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Yep and that's a much more realistic depiction of what the NAM is seeing and lines up with soundings far better. I'm just guessing here but I think Tidbits will see stuff as "snow" on the NAM maps if the surface temp is 33-35, that seems to be a common problem with the map and it did the same with the January storm earlier this year. I like the Kuchera better since it seems to show what would be snow based on soundings and a full atmosphere profile.
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For those doubting the warm nose being shown... if you are near the 700mb 0C or higher line in NC, per soundings, there is a significant warm nose at the 700-800mb level that would give a nice cold 33F and rain. The warm air being pushed in is a real deal, even with a less amped solution Raleigh and surrounding areas would likely be a cold rain for the bulk of the heavy precip.
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That's a very reasonable forecast too. A lot of people are going to end up surprised when the warm nose makes its way well inland past Raleigh and sits there. The amped solution is not good for most and favors the mountains into extreme western/nw NC. The 3km NAM shows the warm nose very well too. Models usually underestimate the warm nose too with the NAM closest to what occurs.
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I have my eyes on the December 12th storm... It might be a better overall snow event for most of NC if we can get it to amplify fast enough. It's pretty close right now on the GFS. This storm looks like a classic I-85 special. That warm nose is really starting to show up on the CMC and is making it well inland...
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Not lately it hasn't. The blizzard in the NE earlier this year it was one of the colder models and busted horribly... the January storm last year it was also one of the colder models until within about 18 hours out and it busted pretty badly then too. Warm noses often come in stronger and warmer than modeled and the RGEM doesn't do very well with them at this range, within 24 hours it is very good but this far out it struggles.
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It was definitely the NAM, the GFS was one of the colder solutions from what I recall. When the NAM is colder than the GFS it always gets my interest... surface temps will be marginal 32-34 but cold enough IMO. The key is where the 750-850mb warm nose sets up. Right now the NAM sets that up along the I-95 corridor or just to the west of it favoring RDU to CLT and points west. That seems quite reasonable given climo as well.
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There was on the NAM but people discounted it because it was the NAM. Typically around here the model with the most aggressive warm nose oftentimes ends up being close to reality, though not always. The NAM has a similar temp profile to the Euro with the warm nose getting as far inland as Rocky Mount to RDU. This seems to be the consensus for now but will change as models figure out the dynamics and timing of everything. The warm nose modeled on the Euro and NAM seems to be in the 750-850mb layer.
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It's really the GFS vs every other model on temps. GFS is insistent on upper 30s to low 40s across NC while the CMC, NAM, and Euro all drop temps in the 32-35F range for most of the event. That's the biggest reason the GFS shows mostly a cold rain, the 850 level and soundings are cold enough for areas like Raleigh but the boundary layer is a bit warm.