Gonna give this one its own thread. Concern for our state is now on the developing winter storm that is pegged to come in over the next couple days. Norman WFO has tossed up a Winter Storm Watch (National Weather Service Watch Warning Advisory Summary) for the counties expected to be most effected. Snow fall forecasts seem to be up in the air since some models are extremely aggressive (upwards of 20 inches) and others are just terrible with winter storms. Ground temperatures are all in the low to mid 50s throughout the state, so the rate of snowfall would need to be great for it to stick - which it should be.
I'm going to focus on the OKC metro for this first post. Going to throw up what a model is thinking (will get more when I have time to take a closer look). My thought son snowfall rates will be mitigated a bit...living in the Great Lakes for several years, these type of forecasts are the hardest to do.
GFS has OKC falling below freezing in the late afternoon on Friday. Precip will already be ongoing at this time with some light to moderate rain. This will likely mix over and change to show, upper levels will be cold enough to have frozen precip all the way down. Through the course of the event (Saturday morning) total water content will be around .4" to 1.00", which typically would translate into 4 to 10 inches of snow (this isn't the north where you have a higher water to snow ratio). However, this snow is likely to be pretty heavy with a lot of water content, so with compacting in mind ground accumulations would likely be anywhere from 2 to 5 inches. Higher values on the north side, lower from Norman south. Winds will be on the order of 15-25mph with much higher gusts during the event, so visibilities will be low.
I won't post regarding WRF, since it keeps temps no lower than 40 here in Central Oklahoma which would lead to just cold rain. Will update with the new model runs later this evening.
Bookmarks