That feature wasn't really forecasted to show up in a major way until the low reaches Alabama late Saturday into Sunday.Has a forecasted warm nose failed? Been overtaken by the cold?
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That feature wasn't really forecasted to show up in a major way until the low reaches Alabama late Saturday into Sunday.Has a forecasted warm nose failed? Been overtaken by the cold?
The warm nose is something I am interested to see if it changes or not.That feature wasn't really forecasted to show up in a major way until the low reaches Alabama late Saturday into Sunday.
34.3 imby on green mountainFreezing rain currently moving through Little Rock.
34.2⁰ IMBY north of Huntsville
It's one of the WRFs. It, alongside the WRF-ARW tend to do pretty well with severe, but I'm not familiar with their winter capabilities. From the 00Z suite, HRRR presents a "lower-end" scenario for much of Georgia, but a worst-case scenario for Mississippi, while the WRF-NSSL is a worst-case scenario for Georgia. WRF-ARW is somewhere in between.Courtesy of a net on another forum.. what do yall know about this model? This makes me a little bit alarmed.. lots of folks caught off guard.. he did mention it’s an outlier.. since the models don’t have a clue.. just looking for other’s thoughts.
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somebody pointed this out and sure enough we have a 913mb low pressure, what influence does this have on the winter storm?
Ummm.... I'm very astonished by that low of a pressure over Texas. I just looked at the WPC surface analysis to verify and they have it too. That's quite a low pressure especially for that area.
What’s your thoughts for Northern Lowndes County? We’re tethering on the edge and hoping for that warm nose. I wish it’d overtake our entire state or it’d get cold enough at every layer for just snow!Ummm.... I'm very astonished by that low of a pressure over Texas. I just looked at the WPC surface analysis to verify and they have it too. That's quite a low pressure especially for that area.
I was thinking the same thing. Could be a mistake or error.That simply...can't be correct. That's the pressure of a Category 5 hurricane. The lowest recorded pressure from a non-tropical cyclone in the CONUS is approximately 955mb, seen only twice on record (in 1913 and 2010).
Anyway this storm as near as I can tell was never expected to involve exceptional cyclogenesis. Instead we are seeing the widespread winter precip that we are because of the unusual phasing and interaction of air masses.