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Remnants of T.S. Andrea to Impact the NE - Flood Threat!


moneypitmike

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  On 6/7/2013 at 4:29 PM, CoastalWx said:

I guess pickles does not remember the mother of all mid level bands, Dec. 9, 2005.

 

 

12/20/09, 12/21/08, 1/27/11, 2/26/99, 12/26/04....and not sure how this one can be forgotton: 4/1/97.

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  On 6/7/2013 at 5:00 PM, cpick79 said:

It was prolly 80 and sunny at the beach that infamous day in sfl. Just in last few winters and i wasnt a weenie in h.s (for 97)

Those bands are almost mesoscale in nature. I'd rather just hope I'm in the CCB coming off the Atlantic.

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  On 6/7/2013 at 5:03 PM, sbos_wx said:

I'll never forget watching TV, expecting not a lot, and then realizing my windows were pasted with snow so bad I couldn't see out of them.

That was an epic epic band. We may never see the likes of it again when you include all aspects like frequent CG and 100mph winds.

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  On 6/7/2013 at 5:07 PM, Brian5671 said:

torrential rains here...radar almost seems underdone with what is actually falling.

 

You're going to see that a lot in the next 12-18 hours. These tropical style rainfalls will feature a lot of relatively smaller drops (so lower dBZ). Look at dual-pol products like KDP to find the heaviest rainfall as drop size will not taint the signal.

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  On 6/7/2013 at 5:15 PM, CoastalWx said:

I still think CT into central MA and NE MA are going to get smoked too. I like the HRRR representation.

i think some places will get lucky (or unlucky) with training on the east side of the main band as stuff moves due north into it
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  On 6/7/2013 at 5:18 PM, wxeyeNH said:

Off the topic of the big rains but look at those dews down in E Virginia and E Carolinas. 76F dewpoints. Is that coming into Eastern New England? Talk about a tropical airmass!

that air will be a few thousand feet over your head producing torrential rain
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