I’m not opining on Tuesday yet since I actually haven’t done a deep look into the models.
With that said, something I’ve learned over the years is at this range it’s best to look at the ensembles first then the deterministic to see if a majority of its own members disagree with the run in question. Ive definitely been someone who called for outbreak or bu$t based on each deterministic model run leading up to an event lol but now really ride with the ensembles until we are close.
The other thing, and it’s been mentioned ad nauseam, is that models flip flop. A lot. They can also be completely out to pasture until mere hours before the event. They’re really good, but not perfect. Prime example was 3/14 and 3/15 last year. For days, 3/15 was the headliner day, and you even had a 5/20/2019-lite supercell printing HRRR run the night before. On the other hand, 3/14 looked like a moisture starved QLCS event. Look how both of those days turned out.
Your big events sometimes rapidly uptrend the day of. The trough on 3/31/23 came in more zonal the morning of. I would say 3/14 uptrended last year. That whole week of the 3/31 event, it was supposed to be the appetizer for 4/4, which was looking to be a very high end event. Look how that turned out.
Also, don’t underestimate on shore sampling of the system. Once the system actually gets on shore and is sampled, the models get a better handle usually.