txtwister78 wrote:Cerlin wrote:txtwister78 wrote:GFS definitely not playing along for those who want snow in Dallas area. ICON also continues a track further south. Still outliers but with the NAM coming back down to earth with totals definitely not a good trend. Interested to see what GEM, UKMET and EURO show.
GFS really develops that low off the gulf while other models are not as bullish. If the GFS is right that would really limit snowfall totals. Perhaps that's why FWD was not as bullish on totals?
For sure, the FWD tends to err on the side of the GFS even when the GFS is an obvious outlier. It really just comes down to surface temperatures. GFS isn’t showing those colder temperatures as a result of that low but really I don’t see how that low could influence temperatures in the way the GFS is suggesting, even if it does develop. In addition, both the GFS and ICON have struggled with snow systems 3 days out. When I was in Norman and we had the snow storm in December, the GFS was showing mostly rain beforehand...and there wasn’t hardly any rain. It missed surface temperatures by about 3 degrees and the ICON was relatively similar, even if it is a little more accurate sniffing some of these trends out. I would put much more stock into the NAM/Euro than the GFS at this point, just based on how well they’ve handled the systems this year.
Not so much temps with the low off the gulf. It would be the more dominant (stronger system) and phase in the "northern branch" energy coming out of NM and the Lubbock area. That's why the graphic FWD put out had the heaviest snowfall potential further west and not as much confidence further east toward Dallas. At least that's my read on it. The other models are counting on that not being as strong and with the heavier precip means more snow totals dropping temps a few more degrees than what the GFS shows. The 850 temps are just fine. All about QPF at this point.
There are instances where a big gulf surface low can cutoff our moisture source very true. But there are also instances where it isn't detrimental. A lot of the upper level dynamics are at play also. Airforcemet taught us once you follow the vorticity. Lift is equally as important and in the cold sector it doesn't take much moisture to get some inches of snow. In the infamous 2010 a surface low did form and a ton of rain fell along the coast and SE Texas and that storm took an even further south trajectory. Quality of lift matters too up north.
If we were talking just a positive tilt trough then yes automatic the gulf low would instantly shut off the faucet, luckily at the moment that is not the case yet. It was a few days ago when we were looking at suppression.
Unfortunately I couldn't get the archives for hourly or sub-hourly but the surface low did ride up the Texas coast in 2010 before heading out in the gulf. Below is the archived maps I generated from the WPC Product archives for the period. FWIW also a fun tool to use! https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.gov/archives/web_pages/wpc_arch/get_wpc_archives.php

