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Converged on a 12/21/2024 coastal storm, however ... much higher than normal uncertainty relative to very shortterm. May need nowcast for impacting east/SE regions


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The rap has been hideous most of today but the 21z run decided to bump well NW. We’ll see if the 00z runs make any attempt to follow suit. Even 25-30 miles could make a decent difference. I don’t think those crazy double digit totals are going to come back but if you move the forcing NW a tick then there could be more low end advisory amounts.  

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1 hour ago, weathafella said:

We’re probably close age.  I remember as a hungry snow weenie around age 11 waiting for the forecast which included 2 additional days and when you listened and heard “the outlook for Saturday and Sunday is sunny and cold Saturday.  Increasing cloudiness and continued cold Sunday indicating a chance.  That was good enough back then.  But then again the internet opened us up to a world that revealed so many just like us.  Before the net we had this “weird obsession with weather”

Hey Jerry... Agree.  You're also right about the age!  One thing about our age bracket is that we have been able to experience the incredible seismic changes in the observational and forecasting sides of weather over the past 65 or so years.  Also, we got to live, depending where you grew up, through some historic winters; temperature-wise even more so than storm-wise.  Stay well...

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28 minutes ago, FXWX said:

Hey Jerry... Agree.  You're also right about the age!  One thing about our age bracket is that we have been able to experience the incredible seismic changes in the observational and forecasting sides of weather over the past 65 or so years.  Also, we got to live, depending where you grew up, through some historic winters; temperature-wise even more so than storm-wise.  Stay well...

John, I grew up in NNJ during some epic times featuring March of 1956, February and March of 1958, March of 1960 and of course the trifecta of 1960-61.  However, leaving for LA in November of 1976 returning in July 1991 cost me 78-a bitter pill I will take to my grave.

You’re in a great spot now with enough elevation to add plenty to the sea level climo.  Where did you grow up?

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26 minutes ago, CoastalWx said:

I do think somewhere from near Ray to Brookline-ish and SW may get a narrowband of 1-2” from the CF. Maybe 3 in a lucky spot.

 

I’m not saying that entire real estate is getting it, but somewhere in that area will  reside that band. It might start from near Ray to Will’s area or so. We’ll see.

Agree...I'd favor near a bit south of me closer to Wilmington. 

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1 hour ago, weathafella said:

John, I grew up in NNJ during some epic times featuring March of 1956, February and March of 1958, March of 1960 and of course the trifecta of 1960-61.  However, leaving for LA in November of 1976 returning in July 1991 cost me 78-a bitter pill I will take to my grave.

You’re in a great spot now with enough elevation to add plenty to the sea level climo.  Where did you grow up?

I grew up in New Britain, CT (south-central Hartford County).  Even that area did well during many of the 50's and 60's winters.  Moved to Burlington in 1979.  These days the 1,200' elevation certainly helps...  While I was young, I remember the 1960-61 period well...  Love the Lindsey Day storm of 1969...  Hard to beat the 78 storm in my book;  Organized a neighborhood supply hike to get baby food since we lived on street with lots of babies and couldn't travel by car.  Several sleepless nights due to the drone of payloaders clearing streets... Great memories...  Have a great holiday period.

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6 minutes ago, WinterWolf said:

That’s a huge jump west. 

The pressure field doesn't look too different to me. Precip. field too. The placement of the L on the map can be misleading. The pressure field is like a topo map of terrain elevation with ridges and peaks. There isn't always one solitary summit.

It looks like a minor shift to me... typical run to run variation. But I'm hoping for a positive surprise.

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2 minutes ago, ineedsnow said:

that was a heck of a jump on the HRRR from 18z to 0z 

Still not enough. Been the theme of this event. Outside of a few NAM runs and maybe another rogue model, the left goalpost has generally been not far enough for a big hit. It admittedly wouldn’t take much to get a decent hit into SE MA but this system just doesn’t want to go that final 40-50 miles NW. 

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  • Typhoon Tip changed the title to Converged on a 12/21/2024 coastal storm, however ... much higher than normal uncertainty relative to very shortterm. May need nowcast for impacting east/SE regions

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