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Ralph's Weather wrote:This storm has huge potential. I am less certain about the I-35 corridor getting the heavy precip, the pattern has been so dry lately there. Areas east of I-45 should have no problem getting heavy precip though. If this storm really digs though western areas could join the party like shown on recent runs. 0.5 to 2+ inch qpf with surface in the 20s would have severe impacts. Way too early to identify warm noses to determine precip types, but it looks like most will see the full suite of precip types with this. Heck eastern areas may see severe storms ahead of the front Wed so may add hail to the precip suite.
I fully expect additional waves to follow next weekend and into the following week. Those would likely have a better chance to be pure snow for northern portions of the state as the cold will be solidly in place and deep at that point.
The cold will be intense where snow falls with single digits and a few sub zero reading possible. Doubt we see widespread sub zero like last year, hopefully not at least.
txtwister78 wrote:Man, the GEFS isn't messing around.
https://images.weatherbell.com/model/gfs-ensemble-all-avg/tx/instant_ptype/1643371200/1643900400-Pt1TFW4Ds1A.png
Haris wrote:This is what you want y’all !!
txtwister78 wrote:Man, the GEFS isn't messing around.
https://images.weatherbell.com/model/gfs-ensemble-all-avg/tx/instant_ptype/1643371200/1643900400-Pt1TFW4Ds1A.png
wxman57 wrote:Can we all agree on just ONE thing? That would be a high of 85-90F next Friday would be much more enjoyable than what the models are indicating (high of upper 30s in Houston and about 18 in D-FW)? Come on! Who's with me on that?
Ntxw wrote:txtwister78 wrote:Man, the GEFS isn't messing around.
https://images.weatherbell.com/model/gfs-ensemble-all-avg/tx/instant_ptype/1643371200/1643900400-Pt1TFW4Ds1A.png
There's been ample warning for the state. I suspect as we get closer in reality we'll see things continue to ramp up.
Ntxw wrote:txtwister78 wrote:Man, the GEFS isn't messing around.
https://images.weatherbell.com/model/gfs-ensemble-all-avg/tx/instant_ptype/1643371200/1643900400-Pt1TFW4Ds1A.png
There's been ample warning for the state. I suspect as we get closer in reality we'll see things continue to ramp up. The pattern is ripe with east and west ridges.
wxman22 wrote:12Z ICON showing a major ice storm all the way to the coast.And the GFS is finally showing a storm taking shape.
https://i.ibb.co/3dgt8zj/icon-2022-01-28-12-Z-156-37-278-255-6-26-889-268-333-Rain-Snow-Radar-highways.png
https://i.ibb.co/d0w9hP7/icon-2022-01-28-12-Z-168-37-278-255-6-26-889-268-333-Rain-Snow-Radar-highways.png
orangeblood wrote:Ntxw wrote:txtwister78 wrote:Man, the GEFS isn't messing around.
https://images.weatherbell.com/model/gfs-ensemble-all-avg/tx/instant_ptype/1643371200/1643900400-Pt1TFW4Ds1A.png
There's been ample warning for the state. I suspect as we get closer in reality we'll see things continue to ramp up. The pattern is ripe with east and west ridges.
Yep, very ripe and these taxpayer tools have been showing this for several days now....7 day temp anomalies like this, if close to verifying, are going to put MAJOR strain on this states infrastructure again. Directly in-line with major population corridors![]()
https://images.weatherbell.com/model/gfs-deterministic/namer/t2m_f_anom_7day/1643371200/1644472800-xYmgZrZDwBc.png
Ntxw wrote:300+ hours but why not? Mr HeatMiser tear down this wall.
https://i.imgur.com/WBVY3M7.png
https://i.imgur.com/CGHPmIa.gif
Cerlin wrote:Hopefully ERCOT has learned their lesson from last year. Signals are there again for another major outbreak for Texas, and if ERCOT tries to say they had "no clue" if something happens, it will be devastating. They need to act if it looks genuinely likely and start creating some surplus.
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