Jump to content
  • Member Statistics

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

2/6/-2/7 Snow Threat


wncsnow
 Share

Recommended Posts

Obviously there isn't much hope in Raleigh on this one, but also overall the BL temps suck once again (above freezing). This would be another quickly melting paste job at best. I would say you can probably halve or even quarter the GFS output there.

  • Like 2
  • Sad 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

9 minutes ago, ILMRoss said:

The early January 2017 bust still looms large in everyone’s minds. Me and some met buddies who were gearing up for 6-12 to close out our last semester got a night of cold rain, and basically every office/media org had to put out some overwrought mea culpa on what they got wrong. My point is that bust still ignites a pretty visceral reaction and media/NWS will likely be ultra conservative in any setup that mirrors it. I mean, I don’t remember how this forum was but I can tell you the meteorology group chat I was in was absolutely melting down. So that event I believe still colors and frames a lot of expectations around here.

I remember that well. I was heading back to grad school in Winston-Salem but decided to stick around Chapel Hill because it looked like they'd be bullseyed. Whoops.

 

Anyway fingers crossed, the trends from the 6z guidance seemed to put the northern ATL burbs (in which I unfortunately live now) in play.

  • Like 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

The surface is problematic... but guys, we aren’t talking about an isothermal sounding from 800mb on down. In fact... we’ve got a down right frigid sounding thanks to a nice insitu wedge. That boundary layer isn’t deep enough and the snow that’s falling will be traveling through cold enough air that we will quickly hit 32 once rates pick up, imo. 

3B81FCED-EEB9-4B04-AC42-7E730A3D241D.png

  • Like 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

23 minutes ago, eyewall said:

Obviously there isn't much hope in Raleigh on this one, but also overall the BL temps suck once again (above freezing). This would be another quickly melting paste job at best. I would say you can probably halve or even quarter the GFS output there.

Agreed. I've come to appreciate the "positive snow depth change" map on the NAM 3K to give me a more realistic understanding of actual accumulations. Looking at the numbers this morning a quick dusting to half and inch seems likely for most. That's better than it was last night. I've never been a fan of an event that can't get to freezing or below at the surface. 

nam3km_asnowd_seus_56.png

  • Like 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

I love these storms that just sort of pop up. When they do they trend better which is so much more fun than having to watch the 7 day storm fizzle lol

it is certainly looking pretty good for a lot of us to see some snow this weekend.  Obviously it would be better not to have a change over but a majority of the decent storms in this area usually do, esp with this type of set up. Even slashing the numbers by a half to a third still gives  ne ga a couple of inches. I just hope this one can hang in there 

  • Like 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

31 minutes ago, burrel2 said:

The surface is problematic... but guys, we aren’t talking about an isothermal sounding from 800mb on down. In fact... we’ve got a down right frigid sounding thanks to a nice insitu wedge. That boundary layer isn’t deep enough and the snow that’s falling will be traveling through cold enough air that we will quickly hit 32 once rates pick up, imo. 

 

Im just 33 up the road but rate looks great as shown on this run.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

51 minutes ago, NEGa said:

I love these storms that just sort of pop up. When they do they trend better which is so much more fun than having to watch the 7 day storm fizzle lol

it is certainly looking pretty good for a lot of us to see some snow this weekend.  Obviously it would be better not to have a change over but a majority of the decent storms in this area usually do, esp with this type of set up. Even slashing the numbers by a half to a third still gives  ne ga a couple of inches. I just hope this one can hang in there 

Yeah it never seems to fail ours pop up on short notice. I agree it looks good for most, although down my way I'm on the razors edge as usual. It will come down to the elevated warm layer here. Gfs and euro aren't as aggressive with it as the nam and new 12z hrrr isn't either. I do expect to see flakes fall at least for a while..even if its just a mix. Gainesville to gsp probably will be the sweet spot (outside mountains)

I consider it all a bonus after the 4 to 5 inches I saw in gatlinburg earlier this week but unlike that snow, which was dry, this will be the big flake variety which would be nice. Believe it or not I even saw about a minute worth of sleet last evening around 630 while I was feeding the dog and it was 48 degrees. That is the second highest temp I've ever seen sleet before iirc. 

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

45 minutes ago, burrel2 said:

The surface is problematic... but guys, we aren’t talking about an isothermal sounding from 800mb on down. In fact... we’ve got a down right frigid sounding thanks to a nice insitu wedge. That boundary layer isn’t deep enough and the snow that’s falling will be traveling through cold enough air that we will quickly hit 32 once rates pick up, imo. 

3B81FCED-EEB9-4B04-AC42-7E730A3D241D.png

Yep..if precip comes in just a couple of hours earlier too it will make a difference too...which has been the trend.. Although there is a fairly deep dry layer, some precip could reach the surface as early as 9 to 10 am up to 85. 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Forecast Sounding Data for 36.02,-79.02
NAM 42 hour valid 06Z 07 Feb 2021

Station: 36.02,-79.02
Latitude:   36.02
Longitude: -79.02
Elevation: 119.83
     Press    Height   Temp    Dewpt     Dir    Spd
M    1000.0      120  -9999.0 -9999.0   -9999  -9999
SFC   998.1      120      0.6     0.1      26      9
S     950.0      530     -1.0    -1.5      51     23
S     900.0      961     -2.3    -3.1      90     26
M     850.0     1414     -2.9    -3.4     125     37
S     800.0     1896     -0.2    -0.4     159     49
S     750.0     2416      0.8     0.6     191     61
M     700.0     2970     -0.0    -0.3     218     70
S     650.0     3561     -3.3    -3.6     234     70
S     600.0     4189     -7.3    -7.7     236     70
S     550.0     4862    -11.9   -12.3     232     77
M     500.0     5585    -16.5   -16.8     226     83
S     450.0     6367    -22.8   -23.7     226     91
M     400.0     7219    -28.9   -37.8     225     99
S     350.0     8164    -34.1   -55.6     224    103
M     300.0     9223    -42.9   -59.6     225    106
M     250.0    10428    -51.4   -65.7     230    110
M     200.0    11849    -58.0   -71.6     239    118
M     150.0    13657    -58.3   -80.9     244    121
M     100.0    16174    -63.9   -87.0     247     73
  • Like 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Heavy snow discussion from WPC

...Southern Appalachians to the Northeast...
Days 2/3...

The aforementioned trough moving east across the southern Plains
Saturday will cross the far southern Appalachians Saturday night
and turn northeast up the front side of the main trough and off
the Northeastern Seaboard Sunday/Sunday night. Perhaps the 00Z
guidance has brought about a reasonable consensus solution with a
track over the southern Mid-Atlantic Sunday morning, with the
surface low pressure tracking along the Carolina Coast with
typical biases of a faster GFS solution and preference to the
similar 00Z ECMWF/NAM/UKMET. Going forward, the parent wave will
be in the CONUS raob network which will hopefully limit further
track shifts. While track is in better agreement, there is still
thermal and intensity uncertainty. Marginal thermal profiles over
the southern/central Mid-Atlantic likely limits moderate snow
rates to where low level frontogenesis and associated mesoscale
bands set up. These are currently progged over southeast VA to the
southern Delmarva Saturday night into Sunday morning. Strong jet
dynamics allow the low to quickly shift northeast off the
Northeastern Seaboard Sunday into Sunday night with some northern
stream trough supporting mainly light snow into interior New
England Sunday afternoon/evening. Day 2.5 snow probabilities for 2
or more inches are low to moderate from the southern Appalachians
all the way through central New England and moderate for New
England on Day 3. The heaviest snow is likely to be in the
southern Appalachians with low Day 2 probabilities for 4 or more
inches over southwest VA and western NC and more low probabilities
across New England on Day 3.

  • Like 1
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...