
The latest trends are looking pretty good for at least a dusting of snow in DFW tomorrow morning.
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gboudx wrote:dhweather wrote:BETA PROGRAM
A coworker and I have been working to make a better spreadsheet for creating meteograms. All you need is Excel with macros enabled. This is incredibly easy to use, click the create a chart button, select state and city from the drop down menus, then click create chart. The spreadsheet does the rest! No more cut and paste, and all that jazz.
A couple of kinks we're working out, it's saying 21Z for the 18Z GFS, but the data is correct. Give it a shot, download it here: http://www.heathweather.com/GFS_Chart_Creator.xlsm
This is really cool of you to make. When I click Create Chart I get an error saying, "Compile error in hidden module: UserForm1". I can help you debug any issues if you need help, but we should take it to PM before Porta lays down the hammer.
Ntxw wrote:Wichita falls is a little earlier in the morning, similar to DFW's soundings. The precip isn't as heavy on that model as areas just to the south and not as saturated but would be efficient at producing powdery snow.
http://i59.tinypic.com/10zxqh3.png
orangeblood wrote::uarrow: That sounding is about as good as it gets, this far south, for beautiful powdery white stuff (get your minds out of the 70's) Temps in the mid 20's, dendritic growth zone > 100mb with atmosphere saturated from surface up through 500 mb. Not to mention ground temps already below freezing so no melting on contact this time around
Ntxw wrote:This is NOT a live radar. It is radar from the superbowl storm. I think the HRRR is teasing us.
Wntrwthrguy wrote:In austin, is there a chance that the atmosphere saturates from the top down to get more than just drizzle or flurries?
dhweather wrote:BETA PROGRAM
A coworker and I have been working to make a better spreadsheet for creating meteograms. All you need is Excel with macros enabled. This is incredibly easy to use, click the create a chart button, select state and city from the drop down menus, then click create chart. The spreadsheet does the rest! No more cut and paste, and all that jazz.
A couple of kinks we're working out, it's saying 21Z for the 18Z GFS, but the data is correct. Give it a shot, download it here: http://www.heathweather.com/GFS_Chart_Creator.xlsm
Meteorcane wrote:00z GFS still pointing to a potential high precipitation event next Tuesday, has a warm-conveyor belt set up for parts of north Texas/southern OK. Also as PVA at upper levels, these two factors are a ripe combination for lift and precipitation. The question though looking at the thermal profiles is what the precip.type will be, would likely begin as rain for North Texas but then could transition to sleet and snow as the event continues. All that said it is still 5 days out and the GFS could completely lose it in a few runs, or be way off with the temps.
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