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Hybrid Clipper Event 1/27-1/29


Baum

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nice for Milwaukee

 

Changes to the forecast include an hour or two later snow arrival
time this evening. Increased snowfall between 6 AM and Noon on
Monday.

Snow will gradually enter from west to east this evening and warm
advection aloft kicks into gear at the nose of a 45kt low level
jet. HRRR/RAP have come into line with GFS/NAM/ECMWF/GEM with the
surface low strengthening and track. With the majority of the area
north of the low track that goes across northern Illinois, we are
poised for significant snow accumulation.

QPF output remains robust, suggesting 1 to 2 inch per hour snow
rates overnight through the mid morning hours Monday. This will
cause significant travel impacts, with substantial impacts to the
Monday morning commute. All areas can expect at least 6 inches of
snowfall with a widespread 6-10 inches forecast. The axis of
highest snowfall, between 10 and 14 inches is focused on the
northeast portion of the forecast area, including areas in and
around Fond du Lac, Sheboygan, Port Washington, West Bend and
Juneau. It is entirely possible this band of higher snow shifts
just a bit to the south and includes the the I-94 corridor. Bottom
line, widespread heavy snow is expected.

Lake enhancement will likely add 2-4 inches for lake front
counties overnight through mid Monday morning. Right now,
Sheboygan, Ozaukee and Milwaukee are most prone to these higher
amounts. It is not out of reason to see storm total snowfall
around 18 inches where lake enhancement is maximized.
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3 minutes ago, Hoosier said:

If I know you at all, I'm going to guess that you are thinking 1-2" tops?  :bike:

:lol:

Honestly, I think 2-4” is doable for IKK. Even the worst model for here, at the moment...the Euro... gets us to 2. Hoping for an overachiever of course...

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17 minutes ago, Hoosier said:

This looks like fun, especially if it's not too much above freezing by then.

There's a few models that show that uptick right before the dry slot hits. I really think that 99% of the precip here will be snow. Relatively quick hitter, precip outruns the "warmth", sort of speak. Then over to drizzle for a few hours with temps getting above freezing. Then everything locks back up in the afternoon. As if there will be much, if any melting of this rock solid glacier. :D

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That squall line type cold front will be headed for places like PIA and CMI into central IN ... have seen many storms like this because it was very common in the 1970s when I was actually working in a forecast office, and drawing maps (and progs) -- this is why I felt strongly it would go south. They almost always bust south when they fall off the "chinook ledge" as I call it (around where it is now, too far from Rockies to sustain the chinook, warm sector turns to dust). When this gets past Iowa, it will just be all snow, any lingering rain will vanish. 

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6 minutes ago, Jackstraw said:

We were supposed to be up to 14 or so around here today, then rising from there after 8pm.   we're at 5 and falling!:unsure:

I was just wondering about that too. 10 at Mt. Comfort with an east wind.  18 at Indpls.  Was supposed to rise as you indicated.  Low tonight was supposed to be 18.  If the low is moving more southward than expected as some previous posts have indicated maybe this will change things for our area.  Bold prediction by Roger in the post above.

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I do think temperatures will rise to around 32 F along and south of the track but mostly snow, weakly defined warm sector will be mostly just absence of frigid arctic air briefly, and so temps will rise very gradually all night, peak around 32-34 in those areas, and fall off sharply to 10 F within 2 hours of fropa. That looks to be around noon at IL-IN border. At RFD and ORD I would not be surprised if temps bust well on low side of whatever is the official forecast just because of the gradient. Will say 18-24 F range, and s WI staying mostly single digits except for a bit of warmth carried inland with lake enhancement (15 F). 

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55-60mph wind gusts reports all over western North Dakota right now. The polar air mass cold front of roughly 30-40 degrees has preceded the arctic air mass cold front. Minot AFB now in the arctic air mass has 7 degrees and steady winds of 37mph, wind chill -18.

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