Jump to content
  • Member Statistics

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

Watching closely .. February 1-3rd for moderate to major coastal event


Typhoon Tip
 Share

Recommended Posts

Just now, ORH_wxman said:

Hopefully something like 12z NAM verifies. That was much better for a larger area and still cold enough for most SE areas to see snow. 

Yep, NAM was a crowd-pleaser as usual, but I just wish it wasn't the NAM. Like the friend who is fun at parties, but when it comes time for reality and you need to move a couch his phone goes straight to voicemail.

  • Haha 3
Link to comment
Share on other sites

I just find it so ironic that here we are in the midst of an empirically/verified fastest hemispheric mode ...probably the most so ever observed - maybe even associated with GW/climate change pressing against boreal winter climate... whatever -

And this?

This thing could be a 30 hours of steady > median impact ... with 12 hour embedded at major.  Could be - there's time.. Even I find this difficult to contain honestly. I mean I won't lie - Meteorological stuff is built into my soul and this is a passion ( among others I have...) ...anyway, depending on the pervasive nature that realization pans out will determine ... historic?  I don't know - cannot be ruled out, though. I cannot impress enough, this was never fully realizing the synoptic/super -synoptic hemistphere.  They don't have to, is the thing...sometimes you only get 40 .. 60 ... 70% returns ... At this thing's governing hemispheric signal, even 80% efficiency/return would be historic ( and you can never really get 100% - that's a theoretical limitation and entropy makes it an asymptotically approached limit )  I think we are getting close ( obviously estimating...) to the 2/3rds, may 3/4 return threshold as is, where prior was about 50 ~

The problem is... the EPS mean 500 mb height for 5 straight clicks ( c/o TT's access) have shown two things:

-- this is steadily deepened/ positioned S toward the historically infer -able bull's eye for stalled/protracted events... being one;

-- but earlier in this thread I discussed the slow/duration-al aspect of this as [probably] rooted in the fact that it is a teleconnector "Lagrangian region"  ( rhetorical license)  ... where it is caught in amber in the planetary seam, between ridge waves... Thus, the system in total may move along at the R-wave modulation timing - that's code for quite slow.  When looking at the EPS mean ...that gives the "look" of being a stable scenario from west of California to S of NS ...? That's why that looks that way.  It's like the thing pauses for a while ..

Another artful observation .. it seems like the Earth does this once in a while ... regardless of the system. If a given system over longer-termed observation is dominated by one characteristic ( in this case 'speed' ) .. when something comes along and offsets/perturbs that constancy ( anomaly relative to the longer term anomaly) it goes on to disproportionately f* the shit out of the system as punishment for the prior stasis - hahah...  Like it's our fault we enjoyed of a smooth winter for 5 weeks - now we're gonna pay.  Muah hahaha... No but seriously, the other way some times seems to yaw violently. Interesting..   

Like, that marathon runner in the 1970s the wrote that book about heart health, had a pulse rate of 40 beats per minute while relaxed...was cut up and svelte and veiny in shape...  found on the side of the road having died instantly from a massive coronary while out on one of his 10 mile stints - like what

Link to comment
Share on other sites

1 minute ago, radarman said:

I weigh the ICON like seven up, never have never will

I used it a few times in marginal situations when it’s almost go-time because the model determines it’s own ratios/totals. The key is to make sure it has the synoptics ironed out first. 

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...