Jump to content
  • Member Statistics

    17,598
    Total Members
    7,904
    Most Online
    PublicWorks143
    Newest Member
    PublicWorks143
    Joined

Richmond Metro/Hampton Roads Area Discussion


RIC Airport
 Share

Recommended Posts

42 minutes ago, RVAman said:

That's a SHARP cut off line. Maybe we'll cash in. No chance we see 3-4" with the marginal temps. Like RIC said, 0.5-1 inch on grassy surfaces more than likely the best bet. Hope I'm wrong. 

This is a rain to snow scenario. For the immediate Richmond area, surface temps are above freezing, but since it's below freezing at the 850mb level the precip should fall as snow after about 10pm Friday for areas north of about Petersburg. With good rates, the snow could still stick especially with the time of day, but the surface temps won't make this a 10:1 ratio like the snow maps show. Best rates look to be (per Euro) between 2am and 4am. Precip could be over before sunrise. 

1558112803_4amprecip.thumb.png.a77744848037f055bbbf63c8b98796a6.png

1062874011_4am850.thumb.webp.3d1f8d8bdd0d9ca78d131e2d0092c232.webp360534327_4amtemp.thumb.webp.359d9a01afa95a690b2d30e22d0e8c36.webp43218741_4amdewpoint.thumb.webp.d3fd03e32bbabbd7f242cb4c7e9e4ae5.webp

 

This is the ONE hour QPF amount, heaviest is between 3am and 4am. 

QPF.thumb.webp.bcb32ccebccf28fedab25a76b913bd73.webp

 

 

7am precip.webp

1731123772_7am850.thumb.webp.7243b7f735df0b2bf0ac1d666072d763.webp

7am temp.webp

231280730_7amdewpoint.thumb.webp.39005f5c49e2abd302797d9a07b31782.webp

975656251_QPFTotal.thumb.webp.84a8cfce976a9755ebfd0615b885b70d.webp

Link to comment
Share on other sites

1 hour ago, wasnow215 said:

Ty!

It's why this thread exists so we don't have to rely on finding Richmond or even Tidewater on the maps often posted in the forum's LR thread, because it's DC centric. Some posters recognize there are posters that live outside of the DMV, but most don't or care.

  • Like 4
Link to comment
Share on other sites

7 minutes ago, Conway7305 said:

New LR weeklies look great for last week of March…lol 

Long range weeklies have been awful in the winter for the past 6 years. I’m not trying to start a big disco but why is that part of weather science going backwards seemingly?

  • Like 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

This is from AKQ's afternoon disccussion.

.SHORT TERM /7 AM THURSDAY MORNING THROUGH SATURDAY/...
As of 300 PM EST Wednesday...

Key Messages:

-The potential for accumulating snow early Saturday morning has
increased across northern portions of the area (roughly from Louisa
to Salisbury), where 1-2" of snow is in the forecast.

-There is the potential for a light accumulating snow as far south
as the Richmond Metro, but confidence in this is lower.

-There is still some uncertainty regarding the track and
 strength of the system, so expect changes in the forecast in
 the coming days.

The surface high becomes suppressed to our SE on Thursday while a
fast moving clipper system tracks well to our north. This system
will drag a cold front through the area Thursday night. Return
southerly flow will allow temps to rise into the upper 50s-lower 60s
in most areas west of the Ches Bay...although it will struggle to
get out of the upper 40s-lower 50s on the ern shore. While there
will be an increase in clouds on Thu in advance of the front, no
precipitation is expected. Clearing Thu night with winds becoming W
then NW behind the front. Lows will fall into the mid 30s-mid 40s.

The main focus of the period is the increasing potential for
accumulating snow across the northern half of the area Friday night
into Saturday morning...as a fast moving shortwave in zonal flow
aloft tracks over the area. No wx concerns ahead of the system on
Fri with increasing clouds and highs in the 50s in most areas (mid-
upper 40s on the ern shore). The GFS/ECMWF and GEFS/EPS
ensembles are in much better agreement than they were yesterday
with respect to the track of the system. At this time, model
consensus shows the system tracking across southern VA, with the
most likely timing for precip between 10 PM-6 AM (before ending
by sunrise as the system moves offshore). While the system will
be fast moving...there will likely be a 3-6 hour period of
light to moderate snow north of the low track, with light rain
(with amounts under 0.10") in SE VA and NE NC. Despite
temperatures falling to 32-33F, the snow will likely come down
at a decent enough rate (thanks to fairly strong 850-700mb
frontogenesis to the N of the low track). Also, the fact that
this event will occur at night will help a bit with accums
despite the marginal temps. Right now, the forecast calls for
1-2" of snow in areas from roughly Louisa-Salisbury...to less
than 1" in the RIC Metro...with no snow at all south of a
Farmville-Hopewell line. There is the potential for localized
amounts greater than 2" in the most persistent bands...but too
early to reflect this in the forecast. Of course, there will be
changes in the forecast track and strength of the system during
the next couple of days.

Any travel issues Sat AM will be short-lived as the snow will
quickly melt on Saturday with highs rising well into the 40s.
Link to comment
Share on other sites

1 hour ago, Conway7305 said:

New LR weeklies look great for last week of March…lol 

1 hour ago, wasnow215 said:

Long range weeklies have been awful in the winter for the past 6 years. I’m not trying to start a big disco but why is that part of weather science going backwards seemingly?

The models seem to behave differently yearly, but they've not been good this year. I can't trust the weeklies next year. :lol: I don't know if we've seen a pattern go poof so fast, especially when almost everyone harped it up, even the usual skeptics. It's disappointing that Richmond has had over 18" of rain since the Tuesday before Thanksgiving and only 0.7" of snow out of it.  

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

4 hours ago, RIC Airport said:

18Z Euro was a step back for us. Limited QPF and marginal temps persist. :thumbsdown:

00z GFS came in the best yet. But it is still a nail-biter situation around RIC due to marginal surface temps. Will need good rates to bring the cold down. Otherwise, we will waste the limited QPF we have. Verbatim, most of the precip stays north of RIC, at least this run of the GFS.

SOUTH.thumb.png.6be523b3ecbe09d2153574e1fbbf1c2d.pngSOUTH1.thumb.png.004c5c1564e2df8e96ae8faf7628167b.png

RAIN.thumb.png.7ff902596713cdf39d7f091230713c5f.png

  • Like 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

7 minutes ago, JB Fins said:

Never is.  Tried to remain quiet as to not be a Deb but shoot, we rarely score on clippers in the best scenarios.

Yeah, pretty much. I knew this one wasn't gonna do much for us. I'd be surprised if even 30 miles N of Richmond getm uch

  • Like 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

7 minutes ago, RVAman said:

Yeah, pretty much. I knew this one wasn't gonna do much for us. I'd be surprised if even 30 miles N of Richmond getm uch

Agree. Best snow may be north of Fredericksburg from the way it looks now. I'm expecting maybe an inch up here in western Caroline. Models trending more north. Mountains may eat up some of our qpf too.

  • Like 2
Link to comment
Share on other sites

3 minutes ago, RIC Airport said:

Sketics and anyone else worried and concerned, well that's why the panic thread exists.

Meanwhile, thee 12Z HRRR, has a nice bad of snow between 2am and 4am Saturday morning across the Richmond metro area.

1421930438_HRRRRR2AM.thumb.png.c565d92160d2c7aaac92ba8b418909de.png1184528715_HRRRRR2AM2.thumb.png.9fe48f10681954f88ea3a796c53aca22.png104904648_HRRRR3AM.thumb.png.4750bf3940be6d8760b4341645405832.png998267822_HRRRR3AM2.thumb.png.aeaaaeca30c6d8e7701b45888e764e5d.png493655385_HRRRR4AM.thumb.png.84969cbfcafc2e79dff2adf33a52ecb0.png849506907_HRRRR4AM2.thumb.png.db941a0a8eef31b0c5fa7f8419d47b26.png

 

SNOW.thumb.png.d5cbb38ed397ac8e9d540bdd5325bbb7.png

 

I don't think it's panicking, just the realistic side of our area. 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

20 minutes ago, RVAman said:

I don't think it's panicking, just the realistic side of our area. 

Yes, and we've been through plenty of marginal events and busts. Just saying it's not over until it's over. But I agree. I wish things were better, but I'm just trying to be positive, as the HRRR, which changes every hour, is only one model. The end goal is for all of us to get a decent snowfall, so we're all here with curiosity and still tracking this threat.

  • Like 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

The best lift is still north around the i-66 corridor. 

427078319_1855276291590372_5695346641213070549_n.thumb.png.c318aacd4e6ca02e552aa8f52636bcc3.png

I am not sure if the rates farther south, mainly south of Ashland will be able to overcome the marginal surface temperatures accumulate. QPF is very limited so anything wasted makes it even more difficult south of Caroline County. 

gfs-deterministic-shenendoah-precip_24hr_inch-8171200.thumb.png.83e3493a46ae81d7cf493d0098c263f4.png

 

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...