Ntxw wrote:Portastorm wrote:Not always. I have seen a slower upper level system also slow the southward progress of cold air, especially the depth of the cold air. Dynamics are not always the same.
That is true, however I was answering for this particular case. What's happening here is the cold air is oozing from the northeast, kind of a backdoor front you'd say, the slower the storm the more time there is for this to happen, only in this case. Which is why areas further northeast/east of the metroplex has the best shot this go round.
It probably will take two things to happen for y'all to get some snow/ice up there ... one, a slower track of the upper low until late Sunday or even early Monday and, two, a track which takes the low over north Texas/Red River which would cool the surface column of air and aid in the right temps for freezing precip.
Based on everything we're seeing and reading in the last 12-18 hours, it certainly is an option on the table. And hey, kudos to you Ntxw for calling it a few days ago!
