

384 Hour GFS Forecast. Includes February 2.Candy Cane wrote:I am at work and haven't had a chance to look yet, but my friend at HGX just texted me and said that the 18z gfs shows a 'major icing event' in southeast Texas around the 2nd.
BTW, is it gramatically correct to say 'texted'?
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FIELD TEMPERATURE DEW POINT TEMPERATURE TEMPERATURE PRECIPITATION AVG TTL CLD CV
LEVEL 2M 2M 850 MB 500 MB
UNITS DEGC DEGC DEGC DEGC MM PCT
HR
+ 0. 4.6 3.4 4.9 -19.0 3.17 99.2
+ 12. 2.0 1.2 4.2 -18.2 13.51 99.8
+ 24. 2.1 0.8 5.1 -17.6 6.59 97.8
+ 36. 0.9 0.2 5.6 -18.5 6.28 98.8
+ 48. 3.3 2.3 4.9 -20.1 2.34 97.2
+ 60. 2.5 1.9 6.6 -15.0 0.93 46.0
+ 72. 11.8 8.8 8.1 -14.5 0.00 9.9
+ 84. 8.2 7.6 8.5 -15.8 0.00 3.3
+ 96. 15.2 12.8 5.7 -15.6 0.01 46.4
+108. 14.5 14.1 9.8 -15.1 0.98 65.4
+120. 18.6 16.9 9.1 -14.2 3.24 86.3
+132. 5.5 4.0 5.4 -14.2 1.93 71.0
+144. 4.5 -1.5 5.3 -15.3 0.19 77.8
+156. 2.2 -0.6 6.1 -12.8 0.00 11.2
+168. 8.0 -2.3 3.7 -14.1 0.00 16.3
+180. 1.7 -2.5 1.1 -14.1 0.06 17.7
+192. 3.6 -8.0 0.5 -15.3 0.12 21.8
Ptarmigan wrote:384 Hour GFS Forecast. Includes February 2.Candy Cane wrote:I am at work and haven't had a chance to look yet, but my friend at HGX just texted me and said that the 18z gfs shows a 'major icing event' in southeast Texas around the 2nd.
BTW, is it gramatically correct to say 'texted'?Texted I am sure is grammatically correct.Code: Select all
FIELD TEMPERATURE DEW POINT TEMPERATURE TEMPERATURE PRECIPITATION AVG TTL CLD CV LEVEL 2M 2M 850 MB 500 MB UNITS DEGC DEGC DEGC DEGC MM PCT HR + 0. 4.6 3.4 4.9 -19.0 3.17 99.2 + 12. 2.0 1.2 4.2 -18.2 13.51 99.8 + 24. 2.1 0.8 5.1 -17.6 6.59 97.8 + 36. 0.9 0.2 5.6 -18.5 6.28 98.8 + 48. 3.3 2.3 4.9 -20.1 2.34 97.2 + 60. 2.5 1.9 6.6 -15.0 0.93 46.0 + 72. 11.8 8.8 8.1 -14.5 0.00 9.9 + 84. 8.2 7.6 8.5 -15.8 0.00 3.3 + 96. 15.2 12.8 5.7 -15.6 0.01 46.4 +108. 14.5 14.1 9.8 -15.1 0.98 65.4 +120. 18.6 16.9 9.1 -14.2 3.24 86.3 +132. 5.5 4.0 5.4 -14.2 1.93 71.0 +144. 4.5 -1.5 5.3 -15.3 0.19 77.8 +156. 2.2 -0.6 6.1 -12.8 0.00 11.2 +168. 8.0 -2.3 3.7 -14.1 0.00 16.3 +180. 1.7 -2.5 1.1 -14.1 0.06 17.7 +192. 3.6 -8.0 0.5 -15.3 0.12 21.8
What kind of temps is the 18z gfs suggesting? The reason I'm asking is to get an idea of what kind, if any, preparations I will need to make this weekend. If we do have an icing event, it wouldn't be a bad idea to make sure our generators are ready.Candy Cane wrote:Looking at it the 18z gfs, it appears as though the moisture will be closer to the coast where icing could be more of a problem. The northern sections of SE TX may be moisture starved but any thing that might fall would probably be snow...
Nothing too extreme, just temps holding near freezing all day Feb 1-2 with lots of moisture. But I wouldn't take this run too literally. There are signs that the airmass could be a good bit colder.sambucol wrote: What kind of temps is the 18z gfs suggesting? The reason I'm asking is to get an idea of what kind, if any, preparations I will need to make this weekend. If we do have an icing event, it wouldn't be a bad idea to make sure our generators are ready.
Thanks. For you to say that the airmass could be a good bit colder has me taking notice. I'm guessing the best thing to do is plan on doing preps around the house next weekend for some icing. It sounds like the cold air is a done deal, and the moisture will probably be a part of it.Nothing too extreme, just temps holding near freezing all day Feb 1-2 with lots of moisture. But I wouldn't take this run too literally. There are signs that the airmass could be a good bit colder.
There's nothing wrong with hoping! That said, my schedule is extremely busy this week, so I'm trying to figure out when, if needed, to do some things around the house to prepare for potential icing or extreme cold.biggerbyte wrote:I hope no one is getting their hopes up over this "event".
sambucol wrote:There's nothing wrong with hoping! That said, my schedule is extremely busy this week, so I'm trying to figure out when, if needed, to do some things around the house to prepare for potential icing or extreme cold.biggerbyte wrote:I hope no one is getting their hopes up over this "event".
jabcwb2 wrote:At what temp will snow fall?
This is not correct. If there was a warm layer, the snowflake would transform into a raindrop if it fell into a warm column and then refreeze in the form of a rain drop. We call this sleet. You are correct about ground temps---to a point. It has to be cold but if the snow falls hard enough, it can snow with temps in the 40s. But that is very rare. Normally at 35 or 36 degrees, you can get a good snowfall. We've seen that here in Houston several times. However, the entire column from just above the surface to 850 must be freezing.seanatsk wrote:jabcwb2 wrote:At what temp will snow fall?
Ground temperatures are really unimprotant. The true indicator of snow fall is the right type of air column. There has to be a freezing and a warm layer to let it re-freeze. I have seen it snow at 40 degrees but it didn't stick. Wxman has a formula for the type of surface temp that is more conducive for snow fall.
sleetstorm wrote:What altitude is 850 in feet, Candy Cane, 10,000 ft.?
850 mb is approximately 5,000 ft. That's why out west when we see these big high pressure systems come down and you look at the 850 temps, those translate to surface temps for places like Denver.sleetstorm wrote:What altitude is 850 in feet, Candy Cane, 10,000 ft.?
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