Ntxw wrote:GFS has snow in Houston!
Pure frontgenesis. You can get those dynamics with a big HP. Not a crazy idea.
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Ntxw wrote:GFS has snow in Houston!
Stratton23 wrote:Precipitation aside, the 12z Euro came back to its senses again, cold air gets driven straight down into texas, definitely colder than 00z run
Snowman67 wrote:Portastorm wrote:txtwister78 wrote:GEFS definitely looks colder than previous runs for early next week.
Yep. It has progressively gotten colder in the last three runs. Good sign methinks.
I don't want the pipe busting cold. Just give me 28-30F and snow...
Snowman67 wrote:Ntxw wrote:GFS has snow in Houston!
Shhhh.... Don't say it too loud. 57 will send reinforcements to strengthen his wall just north of the Houston metro area.
Stratton23 wrote:Harp.1 dont worry about precipitation on an operational model 8-9 days out, you dont really look for that until you start getting within 5-6 days
wxman57 wrote:12Z EC is dry for TX. Low of 22F in Houston Tuesday morning then above freezing for Wednesday's low. Warming from there (so far). More reasonable than yesterday's 12Z run. Considering that every model run will have a different solution until maybe Saturday, I would say "this" or "that" will happen just yet.
Snowman67 wrote:wxman57 wrote:12Z EC is dry for TX. Low of 22F in Houston Tuesday morning then above freezing for Wednesday's low. Warming from there (so far). More reasonable than yesterday's 12Z run. Considering that every model run will have a different solution until maybe Saturday, I would say "this" or "that" will happen just yet.
Do you tend to put more stock in temperatures or precipitation being depicted in the models (7-8 days out from a potential winter event)?
cheezyWXguy wrote:Although most models are dry for now, the case for precip shouldn’t be ruled out. It’s kind of a crapshoot right now, and as others said, it’s a few days out from when we’ll be able to nail down if or where frozen precip occurs. One thing I’ve noticed about the systems that have passed through since late December is that they’ve tended slow and dive south a bit more than models indicated in the days leading up to them. Last week’s system was on the tail end of the cold air episode, and that slowdown screwed over Dallas and points south while points north got some good payoff. The setx tornado outbreak was aided by a slower deeper system as well.
With this next system being on the leading edge of the cold, the same factors that hindered us previously may work out in our favor this time. Just something to look for in future runs.
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