franksingleton
Well-Known Member
Going back to #36
Not surprising. I have not seen ensemble data from a LAM but would expect there to be a wide range of results, especially in convective situations. On the basis of the U.K. weather app, which only shows rain (strictly speaking radar reflectivity) projections, some forecasts will be spectacularly good and some equally bad. Ask my wife who asks me to say can she get 3 hours dry wether to dry the washing.
That is one hell of an ask. It is impossible to predict where the next storm will form until it is already large enough to be seen on weather radar. Once it is that big, the lifetime of an individual cloud is a few hours, 3 or 4 maybe. Individual cells have shorter lifetimes. Just watch a weather radar sequence of actual storms or rain cells in a front. They are ever-changing.
You are correct in identifying “official” LAMs. These will have far better data analyses than “non-official” ones. The latter, as far as I know, start with analyses interpolated from far coarser grids, often the GFS 25 km output. LAMs run by NOAA will be based on the WRF (Weather research forecasting model). European countries do their own development, individually or jointly. Further, there are no secrets in the “official” modelling community. Through WMO meetings and those organised by ECMWF and others ideas and knowledge are exchanged freely. I once asked PW how many levels they used in their “proprietary” model. They would not say - a trade secret!everyone and their grandmother is running a WRF model these days....
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Two that I have had success with are the HRRR from NOAA and AROME from meteo france - I think they are both based on WRF.
HRRR obviously in the USA - I have seen it be spectacularly good.., but it's inconsistent.
Not surprising. I have not seen ensemble data from a LAM but would expect there to be a wide range of results, especially in convective situations. On the basis of the U.K. weather app, which only shows rain (strictly speaking radar reflectivity) projections, some forecasts will be spectacularly good and some equally bad. Ask my wife who asks me to say can she get 3 hours dry wether to dry the washing.
It is the only model i know of that uses weather radar data for the initialization - their ultimate goal is to forecast individual convective cells.
That is one hell of an ask. It is impossible to predict where the next storm will form until it is already large enough to be seen on weather radar. Once it is that big, the lifetime of an individual cloud is a few hours, 3 or 4 maybe. Individual cells have shorter lifetimes. Just watch a weather radar sequence of actual storms or rain cells in a front. They are ever-changing.
This-is, effectively, now-casting. Useful no doubt in a limited sense if the user can react. For most of us sailors, not relevant. On passage, how would I get the information and, more importantly, in my 5 knot yacht, what would I be able to do? The last time that we were badly caught out was about 3 years ago on passage Lezardrieux to St Peter Port. A forecast F5-6 became a F8-9 when west of Roche’s Douvres. Even with two or three hours warning, we could have done little.what i find is that sometimes when i download HRRR.., the first time step matches what i see on the water (wind speed and direction) , and sometimes it doesn't. If it matches pretty well, I use it pretty much exclusively for as long as that's the case.
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