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✨Pittsburgh PA ❄ Winter 2018-2019


north pgh
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Here's a color map to go along with my prediction.

11919predict.png.98287fc2bfa2d86db0b552e79f948944.png

 

So the locations probably aren't perfect.  Forgive my color scheme and photoshop skills (this was a quick job).  It's more of a general idea.  I'm mainly posting this to see how well I do versus the models and whether they are properly estimating the warmth, or if personal experience is the better rubric.

In terms of sleet: though I don't include measurements for it, there could be inches of sleet in those areas highlighted, obviously more as you go north in and around the city metro.  Ice calls for the possibility of freezing rain.  I don't imagine there will be significant accumulations of it, but a quarter inch+ in some localized cold spots isn't out of the question.

I do hope I bust low on these numbers, particularly south of the city, but I'd prefer to go conservative when there's a mixing possibility.

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Latest from PBZ:

.SHORT TERM /SATURDAY THROUGH SUNDAY NIGHT/...
A major winter storm remains in the offing for the Ohio Valley
Sat and Sun as low pressure in the lee of the Rocky Mountains
strengthens on its enewd trajectory across the CONUS.

Snow is expected to start Sat morning as warm air advection 
begins in earnest, but higher snow rates are not likely to occur
until Sat afternoon, when warm air advection strengthens and
H7 frontogenesis increases considerably, leading to strong
upward motion.

All models continue to show a plume of warm H9/H8 air spreading
newd Sat afternoon and evening, but still show some degree of
inconsistency in the nwd extent of this plume. The usually-
aggressive NAM is the most conservative with the nwd extent of
the warm air as a result of a swd trajectory for the system.
Most other models suggest a wintry mix will affect somewhere
along and swd of a line from ZZV-PIT-IDI.

Nwd from DUJ-UCP-PHD, cold air will remain firmly ensconced, 
with frontogenesis and an eventual deformation zone leading to 
banded snowfall enhancements. Winter storm conditions in these 
zones are a high-confidence forecast, with 8-12+ inches expected.

Freezing rain, especially in the ridge zone valleys, also may 
be not insignificant, where the warm air plume rides atop cool, 
low-level air resulting from prolonged sely upslope flow.

There remains, however, considerable forecast bust potential 
with this system as a result of several items:

1) The strength and nrn extent of the warm air plume differ
considerably among the various forecast models, leading to low 
confidence in the forecasted amounts in this transition zone.

2) The duration of any high precipitation rates with respect to
any transition to rain. In other words, will the high QPF occur
while it is cold enough for snow?

3) The potential for ice/sleet to interfere with snow totals.

As has been the case for several days, a gradient in snowfall
is expected to occur from near Zanesville to near Pittsburgh to
near Latrobe, and will lead to a sharp decrease in snow totals
from north to south across whichever counties experience this
transition zone.

***OVERALL MESSAGE: A shift by as little as 20 miles in the
 system track will drastically alter the location of this
 transition zone.

 In this zone, it is possible for up to a foot
 of snow. In this zone, it also is possible for 4-6 inches snow
 and some ice/sleet. In this zone, it also is possible for 
 virtually all rain during the height of the storm. And all of 
 that could occur in different sections of the same county.

 Anyone in this zone should be prepared for up to 12" of snow, 
 or as little as 1" snow, because that is the reality of this 
 system's event horizon.***

By late Sat night, cold air will advance sewd at the back side
of the upper-level low, leading to a transition back to snow in
all zones as the system departs.

Apart from far-ern sections, widespread snow should be winding 
down during the morning on Sun, and a transition to snow 
showers will ensue as lake enhancement increases.

Cold air Sun night and continued wind will lead to wind chill
values reaching advisory levels in many areas. This concern has
been highlighted in the HWO at this time, with headlines likely
once any wintry precipitation is over.
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My anti-tongue hope hinges on two things:

As modeled, this not a primary through Ohio with redevelopment. The WTOD dipiction is usually because places to the east experience CADDing and places to the north are far enough out of harms way before a secondary storm takes over. If this is seriously going to pass to the SE by way of southern WV, then I think even areas that get more warm push will flip back. The track is the “big IF” to me.

Second is the time of year. It’s climatology the coldest. That gives a little more hope.

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3 minutes ago, north pgh said:

What part of Pittsburgh are you in? When you say it "screws us" are you saying the entire region or just a portion of the County?

Just asking. Thanks

RGEM is much closer to a hit for us, and considering just how far north it was this is a good bump south.

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