Jump to content
  • Member Statistics

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

November Discussion


40/70 Benchmark
 Share

Recommended Posts

17 minutes ago, ORH_wxman said:

You already know this....but for those that don't:

Unfortunately very rare in New England....you almost need one of those "due south wind" type events where everything is eroding but someone like Chris up in Greenfield rots at 30F for several hours with ZR and a place like ORH is 40F. But usually those type of events are very transitory....the ZR changes to rain within a few hours.

The longer duration ZR events up here all require strong ageostrophic northerly flow and usually that means it's going to be strong through the lower 2000-2500 feet in the atmosphere, so we end up with higher elevations actually doing better until you reach like 2500-3000 feet or so when the temp starts rising again.

Was that the set up in 2008?

Link to comment
Share on other sites

1 minute ago, ORH_wxman said:

Prob Nov 16, 2002. That was actually a pretty big ice storm for the elevations of N CT and far S MA. We had some ZR in ORH but a lot of sleet too so it wasn't as icy as just a bit south.

Was just texting Ryan about that. I saw some damage on 84 from it. 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

4 minutes ago, ORH_wxman said:

Prob Nov 16, 2002. That was actually a pretty big ice storm for the elevations of N CT and far S MA. We had some ZR in ORH but a lot of sleet too so it wasn't as icy as just a bit south.

NW CT down to Avon got hit hard in that one with lots of damage. This area we had a little icing near 1k, but wasn’t a huge issue 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

2 minutes ago, DavisStraight said:

Was that the set up in 2008?

Massive juiced southern stream system slamming up into a marginal polar high in Quebec. It had very solid ageo flow. The only reason it wasn't way worse for areas closer to Boston and down into CT/NRI was the airmass was just a little too marginal. The synoptic setup was good though...and we even had a mesolow that forms to the east of BOS and went into the gulf of Maine....if the airmass had been like 2-3F colder, then even into metro Boston prob would have had a lot of ice and the 128 belt would have been decimated....and certainly your area to Kevin's too....but both of you missed out by like 0.5-1F....razor thin margin.

Here is the loop:

http://www.meteo.psu.edu/fxg1/NARR/2008/us1212.php

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

9 minutes ago, ORH_wxman said:

Prob Nov 16, 2002. That was actually a pretty big ice storm for the elevations of N CT and far S MA. We had some ZR in ORH but a lot of sleet too so it wasn't as icy as just a bit south.

That could be it; I was surprised to see that so early in the season

Link to comment
Share on other sites

3 minutes ago, Modfan2 said:

That could be it; I was surprised to see that so early in the season

It's possible it was was 11/13/04 too, but that one didn't have much, if any, ice north of the CT/MA border. There was a little down in CT I think.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

8 minutes ago, ORH_wxman said:

It's possible it was was 11/13/04 too, but that one didn't have much, if any, ice north of the CT/MA border. There was a little down in CT I think.

I think it was this one, I moved into my house in October 2004 and it was right around that time. We got a light coating in the grassy surfaces my friend in Charlton got a decent coating on trees

Link to comment
Share on other sites

41 minutes ago, ORH_wxman said:

Massive juiced southern stream system slamming up into a marginal polar high in Quebec. It had very solid ageo flow. The only reason it wasn't way worse for areas closer to Boston and down into CT/NRI was the airmass was just a little too marginal. The synoptic setup was good though...and we even had a mesolow that forms to the east of BOS and went into the gulf of Maine....if the airmass had been like 2-3F colder, then even into metro Boston prob would have had a lot of ice and the 128 belt would have been decimated....and certainly your area to Kevin's too....but both of you missed out by like 0.5-1F....razor thin margin.

Here is the loop:

http://www.meteo.psu.edu/fxg1/NARR/2008/us1212.php

 

Fisher has a nice writeup on the setup in his book.  He has a whole section devoted to the 1998 Maine/Canada ice storm and the 2008 event

Link to comment
Share on other sites

1 hour ago, ORH_wxman said:

You already know this....but for those that don't:

Unfortunately very rare in New England....you almost need one of those "due south wind" type events where everything is eroding but someone like Chris up in Greenfield rots at 30F for several hours with ZR and a place like ORH is 40F. But usually those type of events are very transitory....the ZR changes to rain within a few hours.

The longer duration ZR events up here all require strong ageostrophic northerly flow and usually that means it's going to be strong through the lower 2000-2500 feet in the atmosphere, so we end up with higher elevations actually doing better until you reach like 2500-3000 feet or so when the temp starts rising again.

Not to be overly fastidious ... but, I think it depends also on mass-field orientation.

What I mean is, the trajectory angle of the overriding warm column (at its particular given temperature/DP mixing ratio) plays a factor in it's 'erosion' capacitance.  A WSW override doesn't need 'as strong' a due N a-geo, to hold cold in.  But a due S one, would time the cold retreat/moderation at the surface, inland, faster. 

Perhaps a key ratio can be derived, ..like, resulting in 1 in the arithmetic;    1.1 results in warm air winning sooner...  .9 results in cold air overwhelming and going more pellet ptypes.   Pseudo science to make the point -

Sufficient influx of DP to offset latent heat of phase change, is in just the right proportion to erosion ( in and out in balance), is all it is needed, and matters less characterizing either side of the boundary as strong or weak, just don't clobber the other side and the icing is static

Link to comment
Share on other sites

1 hour ago, ORH_wxman said:

Massive juiced southern stream system slamming up into a marginal polar high in Quebec. It had very solid ageo flow. The only reason it wasn't way worse for areas closer to Boston and down into CT/NRI was the airmass was just a little too marginal. The synoptic setup was good though...and we even had a mesolow that forms to the east of BOS and went into the gulf of Maine....if the airmass had been like 2-3F colder, then even into metro Boston prob would have had a lot of ice and the 128 belt would have been decimated....and certainly your area to Kevin's too....but both of you missed out by like 0.5-1F....razor thin margin.

Here is the loop:

http://www.meteo.psu.edu/fxg1/NARR/2008/us1212.php

 

My sister in law in Charlton 5 miles away got slammed and lost power for over a week, we were right on the edge.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

2008 ?

Yeah, the aspect of that even that stood out to me was how the fringe townships like Acton and Littleton... Maynard ...basically between towns along/asride I-495 that were below the bigger accretion level, lost power for a day or two ...due - it turned out - to compensating grid drag effects.  

We started blue glow buzzing the night horizons all around us as transformers started domino-ing, shorting out from current reroutes - I thought that was fascinating.

As it were, in the morning we had about 1/4" of accretion - interestingly ... - along just the tops of all tree canopies in town, but from mid tree heights to the ground was just damp with no ice.  No ice on the car tops or windows, either.  That's about as "marginal incarnate" as is imaginably can be demonstrate by an open natural setting.. weird.  Never had seen a melt line literally 30 feet off the ground like that.   Either way, ... 1/4" isn't enough typically to induce a whole town outage...and we were told that it was drag on the system from the drain.  

Link to comment
Share on other sites

1 hour ago, ORH_wxman said:

Massive juiced southern stream system slamming up into a marginal polar high in Quebec. It had very solid ageo flow. The only reason it wasn't way worse for areas closer to Boston and down into CT/NRI was the airmass was just a little too marginal. The synoptic setup was good though...and we even had a mesolow that forms to the east of BOS and went into the gulf of Maine....if the airmass had been like 2-3F colder, then even into metro Boston prob would have had a lot of ice and the 128 belt would have been decimated....and certainly your area to Kevin's too....but both of you missed out by like 0.5-1F....razor thin margin.

Here is the loop:

http://www.meteo.psu.edu/fxg1/NARR/2008/us1212.php

 

Farther north we had similar 2m temps and precip - rates & total - but accreted maybe 0.25".  Must've been a skinnier cold surface layer.

In the Jan 1953 ice storm in NNJ that probably triggered my interest in trees and weather, every tall tree near our home at 700' lost branches, often most of them, and a few trees snapped like breaking a pencil.  (Noisier, though)   In the next town, 2-3 miles north and 300' lower, it was mainly a cold rain.  Hilltops above 800' had numerous "asparagus trees", naked stems with the lost branches piled around the base.  It was nearly as severe as Jan 1998 though far far smaller in extent, limited to the hilly country N and W from NYC.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

16 minutes ago, Typhoon Tip said:

2008 ?

Yeah, the aspect of that even that stood out to me was how the fringe townships like Acton and Littleton... Maynard ...basically between towns along/asride I-495 that were below the bigger accretion level, lost power for a day or two ...due - it turned out - to compensating grid drag effects.  

We started blue glow buzzing the night horizons all around us as transformers started domino-ing, shorting out from current reroutes - I thought that was fascinating.

As it were, in the morning we had about 1/4" of accretion - interestingly ... - along just the tops of all tree canopies in town, but from mid tree heights to the ground was just damp with no ice.  No ice on the car tops or windows, either.  That's about as "marginal incarnate" as is imaginably can be demonstrate by an open natural setting.. weird.  Never had seen a melt line literally 30 feet off the ground like that.   Either way, ... 1/4" isn't enough typically to induce a whole town outage...and we were told that it was drag on the system from the drain.  

I noticed that in Andover too that day. I think part of it, is due to wind just advecting air that isn't latently rotting at 32.000001F. IOW, get a little off the ground and you'll probably get a nice breeze of 31.5F air, vs near the ground where the air is stale and rotting at 32.000001F. 

 

KORH had this phenomenon on roids where the T/TD was maybe 2-3F apart. They weren't in the clouds even in this setup. So you had a 20kt NE wind of like 30/27 or something like that. Just continuously advecting in prime icing air.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

22 minutes ago, CoastalWx said:

I noticed that in Andover too that day. I think part of it, is due to wind just advecting air that isn't latently rotting at 32.000001F. IOW, get a little off the ground and you'll probably get a nice breeze of 31.5F air, vs near the ground where the air is stale and rotting at 32.000001F

 

KORH had this phenomenon on roids where the T/TD was maybe 2-3F apart. They weren't in the clouds even in this setup. So you had a 20kt NE wind of like 30/27 or something like that. Just continuously advecting in prime icing air.

I vote a new definition be employed hence forth:  'The Raymond Effect'

Anyone that asks ... direct them to your post and prefix, "for example"

  • Haha 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

10 minutes ago, CoastalWx said:

I noticed that in Andover too that day. I think part of it, is due to wind just advecting air that isn't latently rotting at 32.000001F. IOW, get a little off the ground and you'll probably get a nice breeze of 31.5F air, vs near the ground where the air is stale and rotting at 32.000001F. 

 

KORH had this phenomenon on roids where the T/TD was maybe 2-3F apart. They weren't in the clouds even in this setup. So you had a 20kt NE wind of like 30/27 or something like that. Just continuously advecting in prime icing air.

Yep, this is always my favorite pic I took during the storm....look at the icicles....they are not pointing straight down. The wind ripping from 20 knots out of the northeast did that

 

028_downsized.jpg

  • Like 3
Link to comment
Share on other sites

5 minutes ago, ORH_wxman said:

Yep, this is always my favorite pic I took during the storm....look at the icicles....they are not pointing straight down. The wind ripping from 20 knots out of the northeast did that

 

028_downsized.jpg

Yeah you and Dan Leonard had some epic pics. For someone like myself who didn't see any icing...it still was an exciting event from a weather standpoint. Just such a anomalous event. 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

7 minutes ago, ORH_wxman said:

Yep, this is always my favorite pic I took during the storm....look at the icicles....they are not pointing straight down. The wind ripping from 20 knots out of the northeast did that

 

028_downsized.jpg

That’s still nuts, your pics from that event are still some of the best icestorm damage I’ve seen.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

11 minutes ago, ORH_wxman said:

Yep, this is always my favorite pic I took during the storm....look at the icicles....they are not pointing straight down. The wind ripping from 20 knots out of the northeast did that

 

028_downsized.jpg

This picture always reminds me of Mt Washington

Link to comment
Share on other sites

6 minutes ago, powderfreak said:

That’s still nuts, your pics from that event are still some of the best icestorm damage I’ve seen.

 

2 minutes ago, CoastalWx said:

One of the last texts I think he said to me was, "this is going to be bad," as shot gun blasts when off.

Yep, the funny part about that was about an hour or two earlier, i had gone for a walk and noticed the ice accreting decently, but still a decent amount of runoff of the water. I made the comment on the forum "I think we dodged a bullet"....but then all hell started breaking loose not long after that....LOL. I lost power like 20 minutes after that post, and then another hour or so after that the shotgun blasts started.

 

Here's a couple more from that one....I'll have to go back and post all of them again at some point since the old forum is where they used to be and it doesn't exist anymore.

 

 

015_downsized.jpg

018_downsized.jpg

030_downsized.jpg

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

4 minutes ago, ORH_wxman said:

 

Yep, the funny part about that was about an hour or two earlier, i had gone for a walk and noticed the ice accreting decently, but still a decent amount of runoff of the water. I made the comment on the forum "I think we dodged a bullet"....but then all hell started breaking loose not long after that....LOL. I lost power like 20 minutes after that post, and then another hour or so after that the shotgun blasts started.

 

Here's a couple more from that one....I'll have to go back and post all of them again at some point since the old forum is where they used to be and it doesn't exist anymore.

 

 

015_downsized.jpg

018_downsized.jpg

030_downsized.jpg

I think I have them saved somewhere too...lol. Maybe FB or something.

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...