#1340 Postby weatherdude1108 » Tue Nov 06, 2018 4:44 pm
QPF trending higher. That fog was a little scary this morning here! I've driven in fog before, but it would be a half mile visibility, then suddenly go down to 50 feet or less. The cars and I were going slow, because we couldn't see the approaching intersection until we were 20 feet from it to see if light was green or red! Once we got to front of intersection, could not see past the stop light! It was freaky. Looks like maybe a repeat tomorrow morning.
Area Forecast Discussion
National Weather Service Austin/San Antonio TX
242 PM CST Tue Nov 6 2018
.SHORT TERM (Tonight through Wednesday Night)...
Stratus continues to slowly mix out this afternoon near and just
east of I-35 and I-37. This has held temperatures down this
afternoon across this area, and may lead to acceleration of fog
development late this evening. 12Z guidance has come in more bullish
on dense fog development overnight and into Wednesday morning in
areas that experienced fog this morning. We have added mention of
dense fog into the forecast overnight and Wednesday morning along and
east of a Georgetown to Kerrville to Carrizo Springs line, including
the I-35 corridor. A Dense Fog Advisory could be needed as trends
develop overnight.
An elongated upper level trough axis will be in place across the
CONUS on Wednesday. An initial shortwave within the trough will send
a cold front southward into the northern CWA Wednesday afternoon. The
front will initially be slow moving, but accelerate southward
through the CWA Wednesday evening. Forcing appears meager and PoPs
will remain generally around 20-30% Wednesday and Wednesday night.
&&
.LONG TERM (Thursday through Tuesday)...
The aforementioned front will stall south of the CWA on Thursday.
Weak isentropic ascent will maintain low chances of light rain in the
forecast Thursday, along with clouds and cooler temperatures.
A stronger shortwave within the base of the trough across the
southern Rockies and southern Plains will send a stronger cold front
through the area Thursday night. Deeper forcing along and well behind
the front will allow for widespread rain to develop, and perhaps
isolated elevated thunderstorms, Thursday night into Friday morning.
Model guidance has trended upwards on QPF the past couple of runs,
with a band of 1-2 inches now indicated. There are some discrepancies
on where this band sets up, with the GFS tending to favor southern
areas of the CWA, NAM and Canadian northern areas, and ECMWF across
the central CWA. We have added mention in to the HWO for the
potential of minor flooding where these localized higher amounts
occur, and WPC maintains a portion of the CWA in a Marginal Risk for
excessive rainfall Thursday night into Friday.
Model guidance has also trended slower with rainfall ending north
to south during the day Friday and into Friday night, as forcing now
indicated to continue in the southwest flow aloft. We have held onto
likely PoPs of light rain through the day on Friday across the
southern half of the CWA and chance PoPs Friday night.
Much colder and breezy conditions will occur behind the front on
Friday. Highs only in the 50s are forecast, and potentially some
locations across the Hill Country struggling to make it out of the
upper 40s.
Cool conditions will continue Saturday as a coastal trough develops
and maintains a northeast flow over the eastern CWA and a dampening
shortwave aloft approaches. Highs only in the 50s are forecast with a
slight chance of light rain across southeastern areas. Warmer
conditions are forecast Sunday before another cold front moves
through the area early Monday, providing another chance of rain and
cooler temperatures.
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