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New Years Winter Storm


Chicago Storm
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4 hours ago, blizzardof96 said:

Yep, the rain/snow transition time will be key. That will be dictated by the track of the surface low. A spatial mean of the 12z GFS/GDPS/RDPS/UKMET/6z ECMWF supports a general 5-10cm south of the 401 and 10-15cm north of the 401. Will see if that holds and whether model consensus starts to build over the next 24-36hrs. I think your forecast is a pretty good starting point with some room to increase if consensus builds.

I agree. 18z runs were much cooler and much snowier for us (10-15cm). Let's hope that holds serve for 00z tonight.  Nice overrunning event. The blocking doing a number on keeping this storm from amping up more but it'll do. I'd assume models are playing catch up with those cold NNE winds? Thermals should cool pretty quick so I'd imagine snow ratios would become better and better as the precip continues to fall. 

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LOT mentions the below caveats In their discussion

 

1). The leading and secondary troughs phase more than currently

anticipated, leading to the surface low path much further northwest

than advertised. In this scenario, a much larger portion of area

would end up with a cold, wet rain with the southern edge of the

snow roughly along a line from Dixon to Waukegan. While displayed by

NAM/SREF guidance, we (as well as WPC) believe this outcome is

unlikely.

 

2). Convective episodes across the Lower Mississippi River Valley

muddy the surface low pressure pattern leading to a more "sheared"

out wave and less forcing overall. While this would not necessarily

shift the zone of anticipated accumulating snow, eventual amounts

would end up lower than in our forecast (more in the range of 3-5"

instead of 6"+). We saw this occur with a similar-looking storm

system in February 2020. Of the two possible failure modes, this

appears more realistic.

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LOT mentions the below caveats In their discussion
 
1). The leading and secondary troughs phase more than currently
anticipated, leading to the surface low path much further northwest
than advertised. In this scenario, a much larger portion of area
would end up with a cold, wet rain with the southern edge of the
snow roughly along a line from Dixon to Waukegan. While displayed by
NAM/SREF guidance, we (as well as WPC) believe this outcome is
unlikely.
 
2). Convective episodes across the Lower Mississippi River Valley
muddy the surface low pressure pattern leading to a more "sheared"
out wave and less forcing overall. While this would not necessarily
shift the zone of anticipated accumulating snow, eventual amounts
would end up lower than in our forecast (more in the range of 3-5"
instead of 6"+). We saw this occur with a similar-looking storm
system in February 2020. Of the two possible failure modes, this
appears more realistic.

Makes sense, and would agree the latter option would be the concern.
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35 minutes ago, Snowstorms said:

I agree. 18z runs were much cooler and much snowier for us (10-15cm). Let's hope that holds serve for 00z tonight.  Nice overrunning event. The blocking doing a number on keeping this storm from amping up more but it'll do. I'd assume models are playing catch up with those cold NNE winds? Thermals should cool pretty quick so I'd imagine snow ratios would become better and better as the precip continues to fall. 

Ya, I agree with the bolded. We may start off as a bit of light rain. What will probably happen is that as the main deformation band moves through on Saturday evening, precip rates should be heavy enough to cause low level temps to fall below freezing rather quickly. Once that happens, temps won't recover as winds are locked in a NE direction.

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