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Offline Ken  
#41 Posted : Friday, 27 September 2019 9:17:19 AM(UTC)
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Originally Posted by: crikey Go to Quoted Post
Yes.Thanks for that KEN. Makes sense. If l think back ACC R was only showing very light totals . I forget that models don't show thunderstorm out put and that is why we always say. 'could be higher totals under thunderstorms'Blushing

I have seen WATL do very well indeed with some of those big depressions.

Anyway great to have something to watch and cheer for. Good luck today 'guys' with any amount of rain and stormsThumpUp



The majority of models have to parameterise (approximate) convection such as showers and thunderstorms but a few explicitly model individual convection such as ACCESS-C, HRRR (used in the US), etc and you can often see individual showers and storms in such models (see above example for 1hr accumulations from onshore showers in ACCESS-C) as well as convective features such as MCS's.
You can also often see outflow boundaries from storms in EC due to its high resolution (about 9km).
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Offline juztchillin  
#42 Posted : Friday, 27 September 2019 9:25:19 AM(UTC)
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A Fabulous insight into the diagnosis of storm potential Colmait. What a treat on the forum this morning. I will look with interest today.

Only a few mm on the Gold Coast last night. In a few hours all signs of dampness will be gone. The foreshore grassed area on the coast is very dry and brown.

Mount Tamborine on the ranges had 6mm . Fire affected Canungra had 7mm. So that has to be good news from this troughing.

Lots of clear sky ahead of this potential event this afternoon here on the Gold coast. Good for convection in these circumstances l believe.

Thanks for your expert response KEN. Great stuff.


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Offline juztchillin  
#43 Posted : Friday, 27 September 2019 9:33:32 AM(UTC)
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Originally Posted by: Ken Go to Quoted Post



The majority of models have to parameterise (approximate) convection such as showers and thunderstorms but a few explicitly model individual convection such as ACCESS-C, HRRR (used in the US), etc and you can often see individual showers and storms in such models (see above example for 1hr accumulations from onshore showers in ACCESS-C) as well as convective features such as MCS's.
You can also often see outflow boundaries from storms in EC due to its high resolution (about 9km).


Just amazing what the models can achieve. Truly enlightening. BigGrin Thanks for that information



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Offline WarwickEye2Sky  
#44 Posted : Friday, 27 September 2019 11:40:17 AM(UTC)
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5.5mm yesterday and overnight here. About the same in the official gauge. We managed to avoid our driest September on record. Overall temps this month are near or slightly above average. Overall, a nice month temperature-wise.
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Offline Colmait  
#45 Posted : Friday, 27 September 2019 12:13:11 PM(UTC)
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Just had a look at the Brisbane Sounding, Moree is coming back up for me now too, it kept saying no sounding available for a few days in a row, and had a look at Charleville. They show a small chance of a storm. It has a few things making it a little harder to fire off but I will be keeping an eye on the radar. A little better than stormcast showed this morning.

I am going out on a gut feeling, but not expecting much, it could easily fold. There is a little bit more moisture than the forecast soundings had. We could see a rumble or 2. Just with Brisbane there is not a lot of instability and a bit of capping but with the afternoon seabreeze it just might cause a few to pop up. Out west there is a bit more of chance.

Still working on the big post. Doing it up on word so hopefully I can post it easily.

Edited by user Friday, 27 September 2019 12:15:51 PM(UTC)  | Reason: Back on ipad.

Colin Maitland.
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Offline Pabloako  
#46 Posted : Friday, 27 September 2019 1:18:14 PM(UTC)
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Originally Posted by: Ken Go to Quoted Post


The majority of models have to parameterise (approximate) convection such as showers and thunderstorms but a few explicitly model individual convection such as ACCESS-C, HRRR (used in the US), etc and you can often see individual showers and storms in such models (see above example for 1hr accumulations from onshore showers in ACCESS-C) as well as convective features such as MCS's.
You can also often see outflow boundaries from storms in EC due to its high resolution (about 9km).


Hi Ken,

Is EC data publicly available or is it restricted commercial data?
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Offline DelBoy  
#47 Posted : Friday, 27 September 2019 1:20:07 PM(UTC)
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There are a couple of small blobs starting to show up on the Brisbane radar and moving due east.
Capture.JPG
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Offline oceangyre  
#48 Posted : Friday, 27 September 2019 1:35:53 PM(UTC)
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Interesting and educational stuff going on here as well as good reading. So good on ya allBigGrin


Comparing the synoptic and the cloud convection on the satellite picture.I have marked in green my interpretation of where another trough line is.


The NW/SE line in SEQ and a line of cloud running N/S out west of the divide in NSW.

On the national radar you can see the cumulus speckles emerging quite clearly in the QLD interior.

Good luck with your chasing colmait.

27th sept19 Qld trough.jpg

27_9_19 trough SEQ_NSW.jpg
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Offline Ken  
#49 Posted : Friday, 27 September 2019 1:44:02 PM(UTC)
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Originally Posted by: Pabloako Go to Quoted Post
Originally Posted by: Ken Go to Quoted Post


The majority of models have to parameterise (approximate) convection such as showers and thunderstorms but a few explicitly model individual convection such as ACCESS-C, HRRR (used in the US), etc and you can often see individual showers and storms in such models (see above example for 1hr accumulations from onshore showers in ACCESS-C) as well as convective features such as MCS's.
You can also often see outflow boundaries from storms in EC due to its high resolution (about 9km).


Hi Ken,

Is EC data publicly available or is it restricted commercial data?


Many of more of its parameters are publicly available through 3rd party websites than they used to be. For example, windy.com or the Windy app will show EC data by default (unless you choose another applicable model for your region) with lots of parameters. Same with weather.us and some others.
Some parameters are still only available through user pays websites or internally to national weather agencies though.
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Offline CantSpellNarangba  
#50 Posted : Friday, 27 September 2019 2:15:33 PM(UTC)
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Originally Posted by: WarwickEye2Sky Go to Quoted Post
5.5mm yesterday and overnight here. About the same in the official gauge. We managed to avoid our driest September on record. Overall temps this month are near or slightly above average. Overall, a nice month temperature-wise.


Great to hear that you got some rain in your area. Just enough to settle the dust and a tiny bit to soak in.
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Offline oceangyre  
#51 Posted : Friday, 27 September 2019 3:11:11 PM(UTC)
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Emerald radar

ROMA 11.6mm Applause

A couple of lines marching toward the coast.Not loaded yet 3pm


27th sept 19 trough SE QLD.jpg

Edited by user Friday, 27 September 2019 3:12:50 PM(UTC)  | Reason: Not specified

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Offline i4hanish  
#52 Posted : Friday, 27 September 2019 3:24:32 PM(UTC)
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If you watch this animation. Look at the rate of convection going up in those cumulus speckles

https://radar.ozforecast...u/stormtracker?radar=QLD

and BOM storm tracker is noting a couple to watch

One Heading to Ipswich
One to Boonah

http://www.bom.gov.au/ql...bane-thunderstorms.shtml



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Offline crikey  
#53 Posted : Friday, 27 September 2019 3:52:41 PM(UTC)
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A storm cell about to go over Harrietville and on towards Coomera perhaps. There appears to be a general growth in activity in the region generally .
http://www.bom.gov.au/products/IDR663.loop.shtml

The WZ storm map is showing some 200hpa moisture stream pushing in behind those storms. Sourced from the Indian ocean.
That will either give them a boost, or shear their tops off?


27th sept19 Seq storms and trough.jpg

Edited by user Friday, 27 September 2019 3:53:35 PM(UTC)  | Reason: Not specified

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Offline Ken  
#54 Posted : Friday, 27 September 2019 4:46:58 PM(UTC)
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Interestingly for late tonight/overnight/early Sat morning, some models have been suggesting the possibility of additional activity sweeping across parts of SEQ but whether or not this occurs partly depends on what happens before then
i.e. it's a realistic possibility if there isn't too much activity later this afternoon/early evening before then to stabilise the atmosphere and passing cold air aloft helps with instability..... on the other hand, if too much activity occurs before then, it may stabilise the atmosphere too much for it to occur. Overnight activity is historically pretty hard to forecast for.

Saturday's also looks to me like one of those setups which is also historically very hard to forecast for because it partly depends the amount of any cloud cover and early activity during the daylight hours.... as well as a question mark over the amount of moisture left later in the day with a westerly flow invading much of the atmosphere (models currently still suggest some activity redeveloping later in the day though).
Once again, total rainfall amounts look pretty modest again not surprisingly.

ACCESS-C: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=...Fns&feature=youtu.be

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Offline DelBoy  
#55 Posted : Friday, 27 September 2019 5:41:27 PM(UTC)
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Thank you for the information Ken. ThumpUp
So far this afternoon everything seems to be south of Brisbane with a cell approaching Archerfield quite nicely. We had a tiny shower up here in Cabo, but only enough to dampen the dust. Fingers crossed for tonight.
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Offline thunderman  
#56 Posted : Friday, 27 September 2019 5:43:56 PM(UTC)
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I been looking for some working cams in the Brisbane region and struggled to find working ones that aren't road traffic.

I see a storm heading for Brisbane on the radar . The best l could do was this snap from the Archerfield aero showing what l think is part of the rain shaft of the storm heading for Brisbane.

I think the high rise in Brisbane should get some good views of the storm skirting past

https://weathercams.airs...port=archerfield-airport
web cam archerfield airport cam 27_9_19.jpg

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Offline thunderman  
#57 Posted : Friday, 27 September 2019 5:52:11 PM(UTC)
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Here is another one. The sun is setting but quite a sinister picture of the rainshaft Blink

27th sept 19 archerfield aero storm.jpg
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Offline crikey  
#58 Posted : Friday, 27 September 2019 6:38:37 PM(UTC)
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Regarding overnight activity that Ken has mentioned.
ACC r has medium precip' signal around midnight. A NW/SE band that runs from about Charlevi'le through Roma and Gympie.
A surface trough line

The rain signal looks north of Brisbane of l have my latitude and towns correct.Looks a bit more sunshine coast , hinterlands and west of sunshine coast hinterlands.

Contracts NE towards Rockhampton in the early hours of tomorrow morning


27th sept19 midnight rain sunshine coast.jpg

source
http://www.bom.gov.au/au...harts/viewer/index.shtml

Edited by user Friday, 27 September 2019 7:01:29 PM(UTC)  | Reason: Not specified

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Offline Kazzanot47anymore  
#59 Posted : Friday, 27 September 2019 7:23:43 PM(UTC)
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Just started raining here in Kingaroy, we'll see how this goes.
At least it's relaxing.
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Offline CharlieBrown  
#60 Posted : Friday, 27 September 2019 7:30:03 PM(UTC)
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Originally Posted by: Kazzanot47anymore Go to Quoted Post
Just started raining here in Kingaroy, we'll see how this goes.
At least it's relaxing.


Great stuff Kazza. I guess you have possibly forgotten what the sound of rain on the roof sounds like. It has been a while since a good drop up where you are!
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