Jump to content
  • Member Statistics

    17,611
    Total Members
    7,904
    Most Online
    NH8550
    Newest Member
    NH8550
    Joined

December 16-17, 2020 Winter Storm Obs/Nowcasting


WxUSAF
 Share

Recommended Posts

5 minutes ago, caviman2201 said:

Something I'm not understanding... maybe someone smart can explain it to me.  According to SPC Mesoanalysis, the SLP has basically taken a perfect track - the kind of track that had models spitting out ridiculous totals for us even along I95. The models (at least the runs over the past 24h) seemed to have nailed the event for I95 - quick thump, quick changeover, rain rest of the event, 1-3".  What I'm not understanding is that the models came to that conclusion based on an SLP that tracked basically right over Delmarva.  The SLP didn't do that - its at least 25-50 miles east of all guidance but we still ended up with the same result.

Am I missing something?

850 low never closed off, allowing warm air to scream north. It’s early winter, barely below freezing, with relatively warm ocean waters compared to deep winter. If we had a closed 850 low south of here, this was an easy 12+ area wide  

  • Like 3
  • Thanks 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Just now, psuhoffman said:

I wrote that up before any 0z guidance came out...the 12k did jump on board...not to the extent of the euro and rgem/hrdps but a significant move to that camp.  The 3k still wants none of it.  It took a tiny step, it sees it now...but it develops the banding to our northeast in PA.  That is very possible...but so is the euro idea...or anything in between.  The 12k NAM is also warmer...more of if would be mix...but that is a function of it not developing as robust a banding signature to cool the column.  

With the changeover coming W to E just west of us now, I’d favor better thermals occurring. Does the current swath now basically pivot to the NW/SE orientation? Or are we refiring more Precip again. 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

4 minutes ago, caviman2201 said:

Something I'm not understanding... maybe someone smart can explain it to me.  According to SPC Mesoanalysis, the SLP has basically taken a perfect track - the kind of track that had models spitting out ridiculous totals for us even along I95. The models (at least the runs over the past 24h) seemed to have nailed the event for I95 - quick thump, quick changeover, rain rest of the event, 1-3".  What I'm not understanding is that the models came to that conclusion based on an SLP that tracked basically right over Delmarva.  The SLP didn't do that - its at least 25-50 miles east of all guidance but we still ended up with the same result.

Am I missing something?

The exact position of the surface low didn’t end up mattering as much as the upper air features.  The 850 low, which is both broad and late developing, is basically over DC allowing the warm air to flood in.  We always want an 850 track to the south of DC by a fair margin.

9BA64448-8EF3-417B-B2CA-A6F88FD516C5.gif.d6d7e51c5e6cac7c48c4ff5d794db7f2.gif

  • Like 4
  • Thanks 2
Link to comment
Share on other sites

1 minute ago, DDweatherman said:

With the changeover coming W to E just west of us now, I’d favor better thermals occurring. Does the current swath now basically pivot to the NW/SE orientation? Or are we refiring more Precip again. 

Check that, now back to snow mixed in down in Westminster even before the good returns move back in. 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

2 minutes ago, jayyy said:

850 low never closed off, allowing warm air to scream north. It’s early winter, barely below freezing, with relatively warm ocean waters compared to deep winter. If we had a closed 850 low south of here, this was an easy 12+ area wide  

Is that why we didn’t see the usual pivot and spin on radar typical for winter storms? Or is that more of a different kind of storm?

Link to comment
Share on other sites

People are skidding all up and down Blunt Road near me and it's so unfortunate. That road is a car trap any time we have frozen precip.

Also: Am I the only one that is fine with sleet fests? Like, seeing sleet just filled my heart with joy after the last 3-4 hours of rain. Getting a lot of sleet seems to add some good staying power. One of my most memorable storms was... was it 2017? With the absolute epic sleet bomb 3.5" of sleet in Gaithersburg.

  • Like 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

2 minutes ago, MN Transplant said:

The exact position of the surface low didn’t end up mattering as much as the upper air features.  The 850 low, which is both broad and late developing, is basically over DC allowing the warm air to flood in.  We always want an 850 track to the south of DC by a fair margin.

9BA64448-8EF3-417B-B2CA-A6F88FD516C5.gif.d6d7e51c5e6cac7c48c4ff5d794db7f2.gif

By the way, look at the ridiculous lack of northerly wind barbs in this image.  Southerly 850s in Erie!

  • Like 1
  • Thanks 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

4 minutes ago, jayyy said:

850 low never closed off, allowing warm air to scream north. It’s early winter, barely below freezing, with relatively warm ocean waters compared to deep winter. If we had a closed 850 low south of here, this was an easy 12+ area wide  

Exactly...ERS caught this early on and no one wanted to hear it but he was 100% right.  December coastal with super warm SST and no closed mid level circulation is a big problem...nothing to cut off the easterly fetch to the north of the low.  This could have worked in 2 ways...true arctic airmass, phased system.  In the end we got the perfect track...the blocking did its dirty work...but other parts didn't come together.  December is a HARD month to get a BIG snow here.  We are almost better off with progressive wave type systems that cant scorch the mid levels with screaming easterlies.  December is a good month to waste a good pattern unfortunately.  But give me this look again...anytime between xmas and March 10...and I will take my chances.  

  • Like 1
  • Thanks 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Just now, psuhoffman said:

Exactly...ERS caught this early on and no one wanted to hear it but he was 100% right.  December coastal with super warm SST and no closed mid level circulation is a big problem...nothing to cut off the easterly fetch to the north of the low.  This could have worked in 2 ways...true arctic airmass, phased system.  In the end we got the perfect track...the blocking did its dirty work...but other parts didn't come together.  December is a HARD month to get a BIG snow here.  We are almost better off with progressive wave type systems that cant scorch the mid levels with screaming easterlies.  December is a good month to waste a good pattern unfortunately.  But give me this look again...anytime between xmas and March 10...and I will take my chances.  

Don’t look now but there is a slight pivot to a more N/S Orientation on our radar, and snow is picking up here with occasional pingers mixed in. 

  • Like 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

4 minutes ago, ErinInTheSky said:

People are skidding all up and down Blunt Road near me and it's so unfortunate. That road is a car trap any time we have frozen precip.

Also: Am I the only one that is fine with sleet fests? Like, seeing sleet just filled my heart with joy after the last 3-4 hours of rain. Getting a lot of sleet seems to add some good staying power. One of my most memorable storms was... was it 2017? With the absolute epic sleet bomb 3.5" of sleet in Gaithersburg.

Nope I like it if it’s between choosing sleet or zrain because zrain practically never lives up to the hype. Also, one of my favorite all time storms was Valentine’s Day 2007 when we got 7 inches of sleet and froze solid the next day day and didn’t melt for weeks. 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Just now, poolz1 said:

Pouring snow similar to earlier in the day...radar looks to be eroding on the back edge fairly quick tho.  We'll see if the lift N and eastward progress can slow like some of the mesos show.  

Yep starting to pick up and changeover to a majority snow here. The back edge has slowed w of HGR, but it’s still moving NE a bit. Cue @psuhoffmanto tell us where the lagging ULL energy is to spark off some good banding if it shall come.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
 Share

  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.
×
×
  • Create New...