Portastorm wrote:Big O wrote:Big O wrote:12z European: Light snow beginning over west-central Texas at hour 60. Expanding eastward and in coverage at hour 66. At hour 72, light snow across much of west-central, central, southeast, and parts of south Texas. Some places northwest of the Coastal Bend (i.e., between CRP and San Antonio) have as much as an inch of snow. By hour 84, light snow has expanded to include all of Southeast Texas and parts of southwestern Louisiana. Keep in mind that the snow is very light, but the Euro has a tendency to underestimate QPF.
Something I just thought of, the Euro has "trended" wetter from its previous runs. Hopefully, this is the beginning of a trend and not just a blip.
Does your access
Big O enable you to look at qpf values? I'd be curious if this 12z Euro is indeed "wetter" or not. The low-rez version I just saw on the Penn State e-wall site didn't look all that much wetter but what it did do was keep the precip around longer in south/southeast Texas. However, did y'all notice that the 12z does develop a surface low off the lower Texas coast, just as the CMC does? That's quite interesting to me.
Efforting.....
0.1 to 0.3 for south and southeast Texas. With a 10:1 ratio (granted, I'm not sure that will be the actual ratio), it could translate to widespread area of 1" snow, with some isolated areas receiving as much as 3". THIS IS
NOT A FORECAST. The assumptions are, first and foremost, that it is cold enough for snow throughout all layers, and second, that the moisture depicted actually verifies. Bottom line: there is much uncertainty, but moisture does not seem to be a significant issue for south and southeast Texas.