crossthread Posted January 26, 2014 Share Posted January 26, 2014 Over a foot of snow along the immediate SE North Carolina coastline. A dusting to Raleigh. We "may" be also dealing with , (Asking a Question here folks---> isentropic; over-running? correct? Meaning Freezing @ the Surface, while upper levels Winds are going West- SW direction, )producing Issues here along the coast also, w/a Warm-nose moving in & out during the event... ANY MORE NW trends, (say 25-50 miles), We here along the coast get ZR/IP/Cold rain.. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
DaculaWeather Posted January 26, 2014 Share Posted January 26, 2014 It's been underestimating QPF until about 24-36 hours out and it's been too south and east beyond that period overall Thank you for visiting our subforum today! I appreciate your insight! Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
SnowGoose69 Posted January 26, 2014 Share Posted January 26, 2014 Big question on the SREF now. Does it stay bullish and lead the way or will fall back? The SREFs largely sucked in 11-12 and 12-13 after being very good the previous 2 winters, I had more or less assumed the upgrade which I think they had in 2011 killed them but they have made a big comeback this winter leading the way on 2-3 storms, I still prefer them more inside 48 hours though Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Lookout Posted January 26, 2014 Share Posted January 26, 2014 The NAM does not do well with overrunning events. Look at the 700 RH over 90% to get a better idea where precip will be making it to the ground. if mid level rh is high and you are looking for whether or not it's hitting the ground, It's better to look at 850 to 925mb rh Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
RevDodd Posted January 26, 2014 Share Posted January 26, 2014 http://www.accuweather.com/en/weather-video/coldthreats-for-snow-next-week/2430839568001 Good video from Bernie Rayno at accu weather, says snow fall maps will come later today. Matches up nicely with HKY's assessment earlier this morning about the sweet spot. And I do enjoy hearing the word "Fayetteville" used a few times. I think he's being a bit cautious for accumulations to the south though. I think the cool column will overcome boundary temps at some point. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Wow Posted January 26, 2014 Share Posted January 26, 2014 if mid level rh is high and you are looking for whether or not it's hitting the ground, It's better to look at 850 to 925mb rh Even better, just grab a sounding profile! Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
JoshM Posted January 26, 2014 Share Posted January 26, 2014 9z sref I hope Dr. No's bias is correct and something like this happens Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Stormsfury Posted January 26, 2014 Share Posted January 26, 2014 You can see the southerly winds at 850mb here (coastal SC). Unfortunately, you don't have the closed 850mb low passing to your south like you did with the Feb 2010 storm. Well aware of that, any closed contouring is well back into W TX on that 66 hr map. I think diabatic cooling processes are really going to cool 925-850mb more significantly with the arctic press. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
DopplerWx Posted January 26, 2014 Share Posted January 26, 2014 winter storm watch just issued for charleston county. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
bingcrosbyb Posted January 26, 2014 Share Posted January 26, 2014 You don't see that every day! WSW already issued for CHS starting Tuesday afternoon. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
JoshM Posted January 26, 2014 Share Posted January 26, 2014 winter storm watch just issued for charleston county. They're excited and they just can't hide it huh Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
DaculaWeather Posted January 26, 2014 Share Posted January 26, 2014 Here we go! ...WINTER STORM WATCH IN EFFECT FROM TUESDAY AFTERNOON THROUGHWEDNESDAY AFTERNOON...THE NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE IN CHARLESTON HAS ISSUED A WINTERSTORM WATCH...WHICH IS IN EFFECT FROM TUESDAY AFTERNOON THROUGHWEDNESDAY AFTERNOON.* LOCATIONS...ALL OF SOUTHEAST SOUTH CAROLINA AND SOUTHEAST GEORGIA...INCLUDING THE SAVANNAH AND CHARLESTON METRO AREAS.* HAZARD TYPES...SNOW...FREEZING RAIN AND SLEET.* ACCUMULATIONS...SIGNIFICANT ACCUMULATIONS OF SNOW AND SLEET IN EXCESS OF 2 INCHES ARE POSSIBLE. ICE ACCUMULATIONS IN EXCESS OF 1/4 INCH ARE POSSIBLE.* IMPACTS...SIGNIFICANT SNOW...SLEET AND ICE ACCUMULATION WILL CREATE DANGEROUS OR IMPOSSIBLE DRIVING CONDITIONS FOR EVERYONE INCLUDING FIRST RESPONDERS. DAMAGE TO TREES...POWER LINES AND EVEN STRUCTURES IS POSSIBLE. WIDESPREAD POWER OUTAGES COULD PRODUCE LIFE THREATENING SITUATIONS.* TIMING...FREEZING RAIN AND SLEET COULD OCCUR AS EARLY AS TUESDAY AFTERNOON...THEN TRANSITION TO SNOW OVERNIGHT TUESDAY BEFORE ENDING WEDNESDAY.* WIND CHILL READINGS...10 TO 15 DEGREES. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
WeatherNC Posted January 26, 2014 Share Posted January 26, 2014 winter storm watch just issued for charleston county. Indeed, first WFO to pull the trigger. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Snow dog Posted January 26, 2014 Share Posted January 26, 2014 9z sref Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
mikepie Posted January 26, 2014 Share Posted January 26, 2014 Pretty strong wording in that WSW * IMPACTS...SIGNIFICANT SNOW...SLEET AND ICE ACCUMULATION WILL CREATE DANGEROUS OR IMPOSSIBLE DRIVING CONDITIONS FOR EVERYONE INCLUDING FIRST RESPONDERS. DAMAGE TO TREES...POWER LINES AND EVEN STRUCTURES IS POSSIBLE. WIDESPREAD POWER OUTAGES COULD PRODUCE LIFE THREATENING SITUATIONS. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
DixieBlizzard Posted January 26, 2014 Share Posted January 26, 2014 If you are on the northern fringes of that precip field (south of here), you have to imagine the ratios will certainly be better than 10:1. If virga doesn't kill most of the QPF, there will really be a nice zone of light, fluffy snow that will add up faster. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
rduwx Posted January 26, 2014 Share Posted January 26, 2014 I think this may end up a colder version of Dec 2000, I know different setup, but snow probabilities look the same...tough to watch for RDU folks that were here. That is the exact storm I've been playing in my head also....That was one of the most disappointing storms ever. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
tramadoc Posted January 26, 2014 Share Posted January 26, 2014 This is the latest from NWS Morehead City, NC. They have also upped pops for MHX to 60% for Tuesday night. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
JoshM Posted January 26, 2014 Share Posted January 26, 2014 Pretty strong wording in that WSW * IMPACTS...SIGNIFICANT SNOW...SLEET AND ICE ACCUMULATION WILL CREATE DANGEROUS OR IMPOSSIBLE DRIVING CONDITIONS FOR EVERYONE INCLUDING FIRST RESPONDERS. DAMAGE TO TREES...POWER LINES AND EVEN STRUCTURES IS POSSIBLE. WIDESPREAD POWER OUTAGES COULD PRODUCE LIFE THREATENING SITUATIONS. Pretty much standard wording, I love it, used to scare the heck out of me when I was a kid Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
kanc2001 Posted January 26, 2014 Share Posted January 26, 2014 watching from the west coast (horrible drought out here, we are calling in Juneuary) anyway would be great for back home (MYR) to get something similar to a '89 redux. good luck to all in the coastal carolinas Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Jon Posted January 26, 2014 Share Posted January 26, 2014 i have been trying to figure that out as well. at one point looked like a trough in the area. it looks odd to have it here and nothing around us. other thought is maybe a "reveverse upslople" (yeah i made that up lol) where the higher elevation here is able to wring out some moisture. sometimes a leeside trough develops but i dont think its usually in this set up On two of the members, the baja speeds up and goes way east, phasing late with the northern stream bringing higher totals inland. It's essentially seeing "best case" and what we want to happen with the southern energy. KRDU Total PRECIP in inches: Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
JoshM Posted January 26, 2014 Share Posted January 26, 2014 Maybe I don't know what I'm talking about (and I usually don't) but doesn't it seem that the cold tends to moderate a tad on the models, for instance yesterday the NAM had KAKH a of 28 yesterday (18z run), now todays run has us in the mid to upper 30s. Wouldn't over estimating the cold be a big factor in the suppression of our precip? And the cold arriving seems to keep slowing down. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Crimsonstorm Posted January 26, 2014 Share Posted January 26, 2014 Of course this is the first year I move from Macon to Atlanta. I hope I don't get burned over here like I used to in Macon, haha. How is the model trending for the Atlanta area? Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
bingcrosbyb Posted January 26, 2014 Share Posted January 26, 2014 9z SREF >0.25" precip probabilities. Slowly increasing. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
crossthread Posted January 26, 2014 Share Posted January 26, 2014 looking at our Local NWS(afd) Forcast, this is what they are looking at, (I'm assuming disco over the overnight Model run(s).. A-LA almost a EXACT 1989 event... Synopsis...weak high pressure to our south will allow a brief warm up todayand Monday. An Arctic front will arrive late Monday...stallingoffshore Tuesday night. Low pressure may develop along the frontbringing a chance for wintry precipitation...especially at thecoast. Warmer temperatures are expected late next week.&&Near term /through tonight/...as of 930 am Sunday...seasonable and quiet weather anticipated todayas broad ridge of high pressure expands northward from the GulfCoast...with the ridge axis becoming aligned just offshore. Thiscreates increasing SW flow...which combined with subtle flatteningof the upper ridge...will permit temperatures to rise to near seasonablelevels today. Highs will range from around 50 in the far northwest...to themiddle 50s across the Pee Dee region of SC. The only notable weathertoday will be increasing high-level cirrus as moisture streamsnorthward well overhead...but this will have limited impact totemperatures today.As high pressure drifts further offshore tonight...pressure gradientwill slowly tighten as a strong cold front approaches from the west.This will keep SW winds continuing through the night...whichcombined with increasing high level cloudiness...will limit overallcooling...so mins will fall only into the middle 30s to around40...actually above normal for this time of year.&&Short term /Monday through Tuesday night/...as of 300 am Saturday...forecast is looking more interesting interms of possibility of wintry pcp for Tuesday. Although moistureseems to be lacking initially...models now supporting a potentialdecent winter storm for the southeast through middle week.A broad middle to upper trough digging down from Canada will push acold front through late Monday. A perturbation in the middle to upperlevels will ride around this broad trough through the southeastahead of the front. This will produce a good deal of clouds to startthe day on Monday and will help to produce a warm overnight temperatureleading into Monday. The warm start to the day combined with warmair streaming north ahead of the front will bring temperatures into the 60smost places across the forecast area Monday afternoon. The cool waters willkeep coastal locales cooler but the strong southwest winds throughthe afternoon will keep the cooler temperatures confined very close to thecoast. The low levels will remain fairly dry with decent downslopecomponent to the flow developing as winds veer around to the west asfront approaches Monday afternoon. Therefore counting on middle to high cloudsbut no pcp with frontal passage late Monday.The Arctic air behind this front will set the stage for what couldturn out to be a winter storm for the southeast. Latest GFS modelhas come more in line to support this wintry weather scenario.Arctic air advecting in behind front will bring 850 temperatures quicklydown from around 7c Monday to 0c by Tuesday morning. Temperatures will fallrapidly in cold air advection down below freezing on Tuesday and will feel evencooler in blustery northerly winds. Shallow cold air will settleover the region as broad middle to upper trough continues to producewest-SW flow aloft. This SW flow aloft will ride over the coolnortherly flow at the surface to produce decent isentropic liftthrough late Tuesday into early Wednesday. Should keep a solid deck oflower clouds through Tuesday which combined with shallow cold air advection willkeep temperatures from rising much past freezing in a good portion of theforecast area. A decent shortwave riding around the broad troughreaching down into Mexico will carry a shortwave northeast fromthe Gulf Coast through Georgia/Florida out into the Atlantic Tuesday night intoWednesday. Associated surface low will track up through the Atlanticwaters in an ideal track for production of wintry weather for thecoastal Carolinas. Looks like decent jet will combine withdynamics aloft to set the stage for decent winter weather event.The warmer southwest flow aloft will produce a warm nose evidentin sounding data but temperatures below the warm nose drop below -10cwith plenty of shallow cold air in place. Coastal soundings alsoremain saturated from 1700 feet up through a deep layer of theatmosphere and unlike past systems which produced only a flake ortwo...there is plenty of moisture through the -10 to -20clayer...in the dendritic growth zone for ice to develop. The warmnose runs about 2c Tuesday morning but drops below 0c through thecolumn by noon on Tuesday with a saturated column. Latest GFS showsaxis of greatest moisture lined up from SW to NE from Georgia/Florida coastNE into Atlantic...but pcp water values reach up above .8 inchesTuesday afternoon through early Wednesday morning. Warm nose appears on and offthrough the event in coastal soundings before trough digs down andpushes axis of greatest moisture just off shore. BUFKIT andsoundings show potential for sleet to start but then entiresounding makes it below freezing by noon and could see snow forseveral hours. May see warm nose pop up again later in afternoon andoverall expect a sleet/snow event. We could potentially see snowfalling from Tuesday around noon into Wednesday along the coast. Greatest chanceinland will come later on Tuesday into early Wednesday. Will have to finetune quantitative precipitation forecast/snow amounts as time draws nearer and need to wait to seeif models continue to latch onto this winter weather scenario.Overall looks like coastal areas will see sleet mixing with snow andinland areas should be drier through the column with lesser chance ofpcp but they have greater chance of seeing all snow when it falls. Maximumtemperatures on Tuesday will come early on but as cold air advection gets underway temperatureswill drop below freezing most places through the day and will feeleven colder in brisk northerly winds. Then Temps *warm* into the 60's by the weekend? MIXED BAG.....??? Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
WeatherNC Posted January 26, 2014 Share Posted January 26, 2014 Afternoon disco out of RAH, watches could go up as early as tomorrow morning for a portion of the CWA. ...BACK INTO THE DEEP FREEZE MIDWEEK WITH SNOW POSSIBLE FROM THETRIANGLE SOUTH AND EAST...FOR TUE: THE COLD FRONT WILL HAVE PUSHED WELL SOUTHEAST OF THEFORECAST AREA TUE MORNING... WHILE SPRAWLING ARCTIC HIGH PRESSUREREMAINS CENTERED OVER THE MID MISS VALLEY... STRETCHING FROM THEHIGH PLAINS THROUGH THE MIDATLANTIC AND NORTHEAST. NNE WINDS ANDSTEADY COLD AIR ADVECTION WILL PUSH LOW LEVEL THICKNESSES OVER NCDOWN BELOW 1260 M... SIMILAR TO WHAT WE SAW LAST WED... SUGGESTIVEOF FRIGID HIGHS IN THE UPPER 20S TO LOWER 30S AND LOWS IN THE TEENSTO LOWER 20S. THE INCREASINGLY ACTIVE SOUTHERN STREAM BECOMES MOREINTERESTING WITH A POSITIVELY TILTED LONGWAVE TROUGH FROM NE CANADADOWN TO TX AND A FAST FLOW FROM TX ACROSS THE SOUTHEAST... THUSEXPECT PLENTY OF THICK CLOUD COVER WITH THE LACK OF INSOLATIONELEVATING THE RISK OF SUBFREEZING TEMPS LASTING ALL THROUGH THE DAY.THE CONTINUED VERY DRY SUBCLOUD LAYER SHOULD STAVE OFF ANY PRECIPCHANCES DURING THE DAY. HIGHS 27-32.FOR TUE NIGHT THROUGH WED NIGHT: HERE`S WHERE THE FAST SOUTHERNSTREAM REALLY GIVES US HEADACHES IN TERMS OF A WINTRY PRECIP THREAT.THE BROAD TROUGHING FROM NE CANADA INTO THE SRN PLAINS RETAINSAMPLITUDE AT FIRST BUT DECREASES IN WAVELENGTH AS IT HEADS EAST...EVENTUALLY DAMPENING OVER THE ERN CONUS AS IT BECOMES MOREPOSITIVELY TILTED WITH SHORTWAVE ENERGY EJECTING FROM NRN MEXICO ANDSRN TX TO THE NE. MEANWHILE... A BAGGY SURFACE LOW JUST OFF THESE/CAROLINA COAST WILL FORM AND RIDE NORTHEAST ALONG THE BAROCLINICZONE SITUATED JUST TO OUR SE. GFS FORECAST SOUNDINGS SHOW LOWERINGCLOUD BASES LATE TUE WITH INCREASING DEEP ASCENT AHEAD OF THEAPPROACHING TROUGH. THE MID LEVEL TROUGH`S WEAKENING NATURE WILLLEAD TO MARGINAL HEIGHT FALLS OVER NC... HOWEVER THE STRENGTHENINGUPPER JET CORE TO OUR NORTH AND NE AND RESULTING UPPER DIVERGENCEALONG WITH INCREASED LOWER LEVEL MOIST UPGLIDE WILL ALLOW A WINTRYPRECIP SHIELD TO OVERSPREAD SRN AND ERN PORTIONS OF NC FROM THE SW.THIS WOULD LIKELY START VERY LATE AFTERNOON TUE (BASED ON THE LATESTCONSENSUS TIMING OF THE OPERATIONAL MODELS AND FACTORING IN ASLIGHTLY EARLIER-THAN-MODELS ARRIVAL WHICH EXPERIENCE SHOWS TO BETHE CASE MORE OFTEN THAN NOT)... CONTINUING THROUGH TUE NIGHT ANDMUCH OF WED. THE FOCUS OF SIGNIFICANT PRECIP WOULD BE FROM THETRIANGLE TO THE SOUTH AND EAST... FROM TUE EVENING THROUGH WEDMORNING. IF THERE IS ANY GOOD NEWS IN ALL OF THIS... IT`S THAT THEREIS FAIRLY HIGH CERTAINTY REGARDING PRECIP TYPE... AS PARTIALTHICKNESS FORECASTS STRONGLY SUPPORT AN ALL-SNOW PTYPE FOR ALL OFCENTRAL NC... EVEN IN OUR SOUTHEAST SECTIONS. WHILE THE OPERATIONALMODELS ARE IN FAIRLY GOOD AGREEMENT ON THE PLACEMENT OF THE PRECIPSHIELD... SHOWING THE BACK EDGE ORIENTED NE-TO-SW ACROSS THETRIANGLE... THERE IS STILL PLENTY OF UNCERTAINTY REGARDINGAMOUNTS... AS DEMONSTRATED BY THE SREF PLUMES WHICH SHOW A HUGERANGE IN SNOWFALL AMOUNTS AMONG THE MODELS AT ANY GIVEN LOCATION...RANGING FROM ALMOST NOTHING TO SEVERAL INCHES OR EVEN MORE DEPENDINGON THE MODEL. THUS... IT IS UNWISE TO LATCH ONTO ANY ONE MODELSOLUTION AT THIS TIME. JUST A SLIGHTLY STRONGER OR WEAKER UPPER JETCORE WILL GREATLY ALTER THE RESULTING AGEOSTROPHIC RESPONSE ANDSTRONGLY INFLUENCE THE DEGREE OF LIFT... WHILE A MORE ORGANIZED ORWEAKER LOW OFF THE COAST WILL FOSTER GREATER OR LESS SNOW BANDING.BUT WITH GROWING CONFIDENCE THAT WE WILL SEE AT LEAST A SEVERAL-HOURPERIOD OF SNOWFALL DURING THIS PERIOD FROM THE TRIANGLE SOUTH ANDEAST... WILL RAISE POPS IN THIS AREA TO HIGH CHANCE AND LIKELY...BEST CHANCE IN THE FAYETTEVILLE-CLINTON-GOLDSBORO CORRIDOR TO THESE. AGAIN... AMOUNTS ARE VERY DIFFICULT TO PIN DOWN AT THIS RANGEGIVEN THE WIDE MODEL SPREAD IN QPF AND THE FACT THAT THE CRUCIALSOUTHERN PORTION OF THIS SYSTEM HASN`T EVEN FORMED YET. BUT ODDS AREINCREASING FOR A SIGNIFICANT WINTRY PRECIP EVENT FOR THE SE HALF OFNC. WATCHES MAY BE NEEDED AS EARLY AS TOMORROW (MON) MORNING... SOCHECK THE LATEST NWS FORECASTS OFTEN OVER THE NEXT COUPLE OF DAYS.DRIER LOW LEVEL AIR WILL BUILD BACK IN FROM THE N AND NW BY MIDDAYOR EARLY AFTERNOON WED... IN CONJUNCTION WITH DRYING ALOFT AS NOTEDBY THE GFS... SO EXPECT A FAIRLY ABRUPT END TO THE PRECIP BY LATEWED AFTERNOON WITH JUST A BRIEF WINDOW OF POSSIBLE LATE-DAY FREEZINGDRIZZLE. LOWS 12-20 TUE NIGHT... HIGHS 28-33 WED... AND LOWS 11-18WED NIGHT WITH CLEARING SKIES. -GIH Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
cng885 Posted January 26, 2014 Share Posted January 26, 2014 Think we will see a north trend in the models as we get closer with this event? That has been the theme for most of the mid atlantic and east coast events thus far, Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
dsaur Posted January 26, 2014 Share Posted January 26, 2014 If you are on the northern fringes of that precip field (south of here), you have to imagine the ratios will certainly be better than 10:1. If virga doesn't kill most of the QPF, there will really be a nice zone of light, fluffy snow that will add up faster. Hope so! MeteoStar is only providing me with .07. Not much, so it will have to go a long way These types of storms are just killer. It is so easy to be watching someone close by get the storm of their lives, while you get nothing. I stilll suffer all the time over 73, and this just brings it back in my face, lol. I am trying to rest easy in the idea the weather couldn't ball kick me again...I'm an old man..and I've been good, lol. I deserve what Macon got, not another slap down! I'm putting my eggs in Goofy's basket. I've watched intently all week, and the gfs has slowly trended in my direction better and better. I think 0z tonight will tell the tale. T Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
buckeyefan1 Posted January 26, 2014 Share Posted January 26, 2014 Hope so! MeteoStar is only providing me with .07. Not much, so it will have to go a long way These types of storms are just killer. It is so easy to be watching someone close by get the storm of their lives, while you get nothing. I stilll suffer all the time over 73, and this just brings it back in my face, lol. I am trying to rest easy in the idea the weather couldn't ball kick me again...I'm an old man..and I've been good, lol. I deserve what Macon got, not another slap down! I'm putting my eggs in Goofy's basket. I've watched intently all week, and the gfs has slowly trended in my direction better and better. I think 0z tonight will tell the tale. T The 12z gfs gives mby 6.7" of snow Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
nchighcountrywx Posted January 26, 2014 Share Posted January 26, 2014 From Bernie Rano...Accuweather's thoughts. 6 inches from Columbia SC to Fayetteville NC RDU possible several inches No mention in the video for any impacts to Charlotte or Greensboro line Bernie was confident this will be an ENE slider and will not come up the coast to the mid Atlantic. The reason is the 500mb kicker will be moving due east and not digging southward. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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