Ntxw wrote::uarrow: I feel like this is a rouse, luring anglerfish at a school of surrounded red herring.
I don't condone violence, but let's send Gronkowski to visit him.....

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Ntxw wrote::uarrow: I feel like this is a rouse, luring anglerfish at a school of surrounded red herring.
Rgv20 wrote:12zNAM has a bullseye of 4" of Snow by Friday morning in my area....should I believe it??![]()
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Theepicman116 wrote:Quick question y’all. Which NAM model on tropical tidbits is closes to what we’ll get near the surface? Because 32km, 12km And 3 km are all referring to the altitude level the model reads, right?
I’m new to this whole reading weather forecast models thing.
Theepicman116 wrote:Quick question y’all. Which NAM model on tropical tidbits is closes to what we’ll get near the surface? Because 32km, 12km And 3 km are all referring to the altitude level the model reads, right?
I’m new to this whole reading weather forecast models thing.
Ntxw wrote:Theepicman116 wrote:Quick question y’all. Which NAM model on tropical tidbits is closes to what we’ll get near the surface? Because 32km, 12km And 3 km are all referring to the altitude level the model reads, right?
I’m new to this whole reading weather forecast models thing.
The NAM models are the same. The difference is resolution. Guidance is programmed to be calculated in grids, the lower the value there is the smaller the grid boxes so the better the resolution. It's kind of like your tv in pixels, the more pixels you can fit on the screen the better your image. The numbers represents how small a "grid" is horizontally. The smaller the grid calculations the more grids boxes you can have to show a better picture. The larger the grid, the fewer and blurred resulting in lesser resolution.
wxman57 wrote:Snow down to the Texas coast Thursday night/Friday morning - according to the 12Z NAM.
https://www.tropicaltidbits.com/analysi ... scus_47.pn
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