ticka1 wrote:looks from radar all precip is north of i-10 i will pribqbly miss it by 2.5 miles
Look at the radar out of corpus. you're not going to miss out on anything at all
http://radar.weather.gov/radar.php?prod ... p&loop=yes
ticka1 wrote:looks from radar all precip is north of i-10 i will pribqbly miss it by 2.5 miles
I think evaporative cooling is helping to contradict this. On another note, heavy sleet here with a layer on the sidewalk and beginning to get on the roads and the party hasn't even started yet.HouTXmetro wrote:That will be an absolute nightmare!!! One has to think that deep convection will bring warm air down and keep us around or above freezing. If not, gonna be some major problems
Incorrect. I wish I had the images to show, but if you go to any model site and look at the 500mb-700mb temperatures, this is not a cold core system. There is a significant warm nose (inversion) above us which is exactly why the preicp falling tonight will NOT be snow. It falls as snow, gets in the warm layer, and depending on the depth of the inversion, will melt completely into rain drops then freeze on contact since the surface is at or below freezing and that is what we call freezing rain. If there is a short warm depth and then falls back below freezing a couple thousand feet up, then the precip will refreeze, thus creating sleet.Paul Baustista wrote:there will be no warming only cooling. this is a cold core upper level storm. with very cold air in the upper atmosphere. cold air from the cold core low will be eliminating any mid level warm layer.
Paul Baustista wrote:wrong. this is a cold core upper level low pressure system with cold air at its core in the upper atmosphere. dont lecture me
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