Portastorm wrote:As someone who has been burned for decades now by “sure thing” model snowstorms, I’m trying one last time to inject a little balance into what has become an echo chamber for you DFW folks. This event (meaning ample snowfall for the Metroplex) is far from certain!
The setup is not simple. It’s complex. We’ll be dealing with an upper level low not fully sampled yet by US weather forecasting tools and the possibility of a coastal trough/low developing. What I have seen happen MANY times in Texas is that the upper low shears out as it crosses the state and transfers energy to the coastal trough/low. What happens then? QPF values further north get robbed of moisture and dreams and visions of multi-inch Metroplex snowfall are crushed. Hell, it wouldn’t surprise me in the least that all we get in Austin is cold rain, the heavy snow falls in West Texas and areas of north central and north Texas see minimal amounts of snow.
For the sake of you snow-starved Metroplexers, I hope you get buried with snow! But I worry about y’all getting so certain of an outcome which I think is far from certain. There’s nothing worse than being certain that Lucy won’t pull the football THIS TIME and then finding yourself on your backside because she did it again. For your mental health sake please try and temper those expectations, friends.
Also, we are getting into a funky range over the next 24hrs when globals seem to start struggling with precipitation placement but the event is still a bit far out for hi-res models to really pin down. It seems like we see this impacting forecast often here lately and don't be surprised to see qpf totals jump around pretty significantly between now and tomorrow afternoon. Today is a day to focus on the upper levels and not pay too much attention to smaller scale surface outputs.