• HVYRAIN: Excess Rain D1

    From Mike Powell@618:250/1 to All on Tue Sep 16 10:04:01 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 160808
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    408 AM EDT Tue Sep 16 2025

    Day 1 Valid 12Z Tue Sep 16 2025 - 12Z Wed Sep 17 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL OVER PORTIONS OF
    NORTHEASTERN NORTH CAROLINA AND SOUTHEASTERN VIRGINIA...

    ...Northeastern North Carolina and Southeast Virginia...

    Well-defined surface reflection off the NC coast will continue to
    slowly move to the north over the course of the overnight and
    morning hours before parking off the VA Capes as the initial
    occlusion process takes shape. There's been a bit of a deviation
    in the overall precip pattern from what has been forecast over the
    past few forecast cycles, a lot of it driven from complex
    convective dynamics that thwarted the initial low-level moisture
    surge that was supposed to have already occurred according to older
    forecasts. The previous convective cluster has since dissipated,
    indicated via the rapidly warming cloud tops located just to the
    north of the surface low center. As a result, have finally seen
    bands of precip rotate inland with relatively modest rates as the
    instability pool remains parked just offshore when assessing the
    latest mesoanalysis. The trend is for a slow advection of
    increasingly favorable instability to penetrate inland with the
    alignment of the greatest forecast MUCAPE to be situated over far
    northeast NC into the VA Tidewater. This is the area of interest
    for the D1 when it comes to potential slow-moving convective
    elements within the smaller deformation axis transposed on the
    western flank of the cyclone. Some of the CAMs have been way too
    aggressive with this feature and has allowed the HREF probs fields
    to be heavily skewed into a more robust precip depiction compared
    to what is current ground truth.

    The HRRR/RAP combo has been handling the current evolution the best
    of any CAMs member, and has certainly been outperforming most
    global deterministic with the CMC the closest to what is occurring.
    Considering the variables and complexity of the forecast, there
    were some changes from the inherited SLGT risk across NC where the
    western extension being removed allowing only the northeastern
    corner of NC up into the VA Tidewater the only remaining locations
    within the SLGT. This is subject to change pending on the
    instability advection regime as rates will need to pick up in order
    to secure a significant flash flood threat with the Hampton
    Roads/VA Beach area the most prone to the risk due to urbanization
    factors. Anticipating 2-4" with perhaps up to 5" within the
    targeted SLGT risk as this remains the area with the best chance to
    see heavy rain longevity with less of a threat the further away
    from the coastal plain. Hourly rates maxed between 1-2"/hr are the
    most likely scenario at this juncture, putting mainly a small area
    of potential for flash flooding as sandier soils located outside
    the VA Tidewater are likely to negate widespread flash flood
    concerns. Considering how poorly the guidance is handling this
    setup, near term monitoring will be employed over the course of the
    period with the best threat likely occurring between 12-00z,
    waning quickly in the evening as the low becomes vertically stacked
    and favors a rapid occlusion leading to a degrading heavy precip threat.

    ...Southwest...

    Scattered convective pattern will initiate later this afternoon
    and the early evening hours before fading with the loss of diurnal
    heating. Current progs are for convection to be tied closer to the
    terrain across southeast AZ into southern NM with isolated
    signatures of >1"/hr plausible in the stronger cell cores. These
    areas generally prone to runoff due to terrain complexities, as
    well as remnant burn scars present in some locations. There was
    very little change from the inherited MRGL risk with the forecast
    running close to general continuity.

    ...Central High Plains...

    Strong shortwave trough ejection out of the interior Northwest will
    lead to convective development and regional enhancement across the
    Central High Plains. Greatest ascent is aligned with the diffluent
    region of the mid-level shortwave with left-exit region dynamics
    likely to maintain a prevalent heavy rain signature across the
    western third of NE down into neighboring northeast CO and
    northwest KS. Guidance has come into alignment with the axis of
    heaviest precip centered near and just north of North Platte, NE
    with the corridor extending south into southwestern NE and
    northwest KS by the second half of the forecast period. 00z HREF
    neighborhood probs for >3" are running between 20-40% across the
    referenced area near North Platte and points south. This still
    aligns well with the previous forecast MRGL risk leading to little
    deviation in the current thinking. The areas of highest risk will
    likely be smaller towns and urbanized areas, like North Platte that
    are more susceptible to runoff.

    Kleebauer
    $$
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  • From Mike Powell@618:250/1 to All on Wed Sep 17 08:51:24 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 170758
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    358 AM EDT Wed Sep 17 2025

    Day 1 Valid 12Z Wed Sep 17 2025 - 12Z Thu Sep 18 2025

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR WESTERN AND
    CENTRAL SOUTH DAKOTA...

    ...Northern and Central Plains...

    A broad mid-latitude cyclone will continue to impact a large
    portion of the Plains over the course of Wednesday into Thursday
    with multiple areas of heavy rain plausible given a variety of
    dynamical and thermodynamic processes. The area with the greatest
    concern is likely within the well-defined axis of deformation that
    is forecast to materialize across the western half of SD leading to
    scattered flash flood concerns thanks to wet antecedent conditions
    in wake of a previous disturbance that distributed copious amounts
    of rain to areas along and west of the Missouri River. Guidance is
    in agreement on the threat for 1-3" over the area extending from
    the river over to the SD/WY state line, delineating the deformation
    structure forecast to materialize within the northern and western
    half of the cyclone situated over NE. FFG's on the order of 0.5-2"
    between 1/3/6 hr. intervals are running much lower than climo
    leading to a lower threshold to breach that could very well cause
    issues across that broad area of western SD. 5 and 10-year ARI
    exceedance probs are running between 50-80% and 30-60%,
    respectively between the two intervals, a solid representation of
    at least some scattered flash flood concerns with perhaps a broader
    scope of impact considering the areal footprint of the
    probabilities in question. Rates will be ~1"/hr at peak intensity,
    but could very well last for multiple hours due to the anticipated synoptic scale evolution of the surface lows slower forward propagation
    speed leading to training over a large area of SD down into
    northwest NE. In this case, the previous SLGT risk was maintained
    with some minor expansion on the edges to account for the latest
    probabilities and HREF blended mean QPF output.

    By the afternoon and evening, defined warm conveyor belt (WCB) will
    be situated across much of the Missouri River basin extending from
    OK/AR up into eastern SD. A warm front will lift north and
    transition to a quasi-stationary boundary across east-central SD
    through south-central MN leading to a focused frontal alignment for
    storms to materialize later in the period. This has been a trend
    within the recent CAMs as convective initiation will likely be
    spurred by the arrival of a shortwave pivoting around the eastern
    flank of the primary ULL, generating a better large scale ascent
    pattern focused downstream of the center of circulation. With dew
    points expected to be in the 60s for locations within the defined
    WCB, there will be room for scattered to widespread convective
    development during afternoon and evening time frame as the
    environment ripens with the typical diurnal heat flux. The frontal
    positioning over the Northern Plains and Upper Midwest will be a
    target for training convection as cells can become anchored to the
    front and lead to localized areas of heavy rainfall that could drop
    a quick 2-4" over a span of a few hrs. Rates between 1-2"/hr in
    convection are likely in this setup for anywhere within the WCB
    leading to a general maintenance of the MRGL risk across the
    Plains, but have now expanded the MRGL risk eastward into MN to
    account for the frontal alignment and growing threat of convection
    spawning near and within the boundaries forecast location.

    ...Southern High Plains...

    Multi-round convective episode anticipated across the southeast CO
    Front Range down into the OK/TX Panhandles and adjacent northeast
    NM beginning later this afternoon, carrying through the evening
    hours. Lee side low over eastern CO/western KS will materialize
    within the broad synoptic scale evolution occurring over the center
    of the CONUS. A trailing cold front will drag south and southwest
    through the above areas with an initial flare up of convective
    activity this afternoon along the front creating a moment of
    priming before a larger shortwave ejecting out of the Central
    Rockies becomes the focus for later. Models are in agreement on
    quite a strong mid-level vorticity ejection into the Front Range
    late-afternoon and early evening today leading to a blossoming
    convective initiation in-of the terrain just west of I-25 in
    southeast CO. Storms will grow upscale and migrate eastward into
    the Front Range, continuing to slide east-southeast as they deliver
    locally heavy rainfall in their wake leading to an isolated to
    scattered flash flood concern through the second half of the
    forecast. This setup has been documented in some way over the past
    several forecast iterations, but the threat is now clear in the
    main show focused within the strong mid-level ascent pattern
    generated by the shortwave rounding the trough base. Expect
    localized totals of 2-3" in the hardest hit locations with a max of
    up to 4" across the far southeast corner of CO down into the
    northern TX Panhandle. This is reflected by the modest >3"
    neighborhood probabilities in the latest 00z HREF suite, a solid
    indicator for a MRGL risk maintenance from previous forecasts.

    ...Southwest...

    Little change from the previous forecast as guidance maintains a
    signal for another period of isolated to scattered convection
    over the terrain encompassing southern AZ up through the central
    and eastern portions of NM with the primary threat being heavy
    rainfall situated over more complex terrain and burn scar remnants.
    Assessment of forecast soundings and hodographs indicate
    relatively slower cell motions, a classic characteristic for flash
    flood prospects over the desert southwest. Guidance reflects local
    1-2" totals scattered across the region extending from southeast AZ
    into NM with some of the better signals focused within those
    mountain ranges like the Huachucas and Sacramento's. The previous
    MRGL risk was relatively unchanged considering the favorable run
    to run continuity.

    ...Southeast Florida...

    Broad cyclonic pattern across the eastern CONUS will aid in
    advecting a relatively stout mid-level shortwave currently centered
    along the northern coast of Cuba. IR satellite this evening shows
    the disturbance is very well-defined with a centroid of cooler
    cloud tops indicating scattered to widespread convective coverage
    in-of the western Florida Straits at this hour. Considering the
    south to southwesterly flow between the 850-300mb layer, the
    expectation is for convection to move generally northeast with the
    mean flow, ushering in a more focused area of forcing capable of
    impacting all of South FL, including the Keys with heavy rainfall
    at any point. PWATs are on the rise according to the latest 00z
    RAOB's out of KMFL and KEYW this evening with a broad expanse of
    1.9-2.2" PWATs over the region. Forecast is for PWATs to continue
    to increase with an expectation of indices to settle between
    2-2.3", a solid 1-1.5 deviations above normal when assessing the
    latest NAEFS output. Guidance is keying in on the FL Keys to be the
    primary focus for heaviest QPF during the forecast period, however
    the environment is favored for any area situated south of I-4,
    especially over southeast FL where sea breeze components and deep
    moisture presence will lend to pockets of very heavy rainfall from
    convection that develops over the area. These cells will be
    scattered in nature, but the prospects for 2-3"/hr rates with
    higher intra-hour rates across the urban corridor from Melbourne
    down to Miami will make for at least a modest MRGL risk for
    excessive rainfall over the next 24+ hours. The previous risk was
    expanded north to include KMLB as hi-res trends are keying on a
    convergent area north of where the previous risk forecast(s) have
    been made.

    Kleebauer
    $$
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