Hi all,
Well...after what seems to have been the longest wait of all time, I am finally going to write about a potential storm day. Its not looking great by any means but its a Saturday, I can chase, and there will be storms.
Forget about GFS (for now...it'll probably jump on the bandwagon tomorrow afternoon after the fact). Its MesoLAPS that I like (and the BoM are obviously putting faith in it as that's what they are basing their forecast on). Ok - i'll stop blabbering and start typing.
The upper trough that is sitting along the ranges of NSW (roughly) is set to pulse again tomorrow which will see the surface trough dig back inland but only as far as the ranges over NE NSW. SE'lys will dominate the rest of the east coast S of about Coffs - Grafton area. DP's should slip up around 18C (maybe higher but the source of the low level moisture is not the Coral Sea so not expecting 20's). Upper level temps should be around -12C or so and surface temps should creep into the high 20's and maybe even push 30C. Shear is ok. Not great in the lower levels with 5-10knt N to NE'ly at the surface. By 700mb, the air is dry and the winds are W'ly at 20-25ktns and at 500mb, the winds are WNW'ly at 35-40knts. The jet is sitting over the NE NSW region with 75knts or so. Its enough for storms to get organised for a bit and if something can get going, it should at least be photogenic. I'll check the models runs again tomorrow morning but I think I might be heading down to Casino (area).
Interestingly enough, GFS has the trough sitting off the coast with -6 or so LI's off the coast (due to the upper trough pushing through earlier - but much stronger than MesoLAPS). I wouldn't be surprised to see the surface trough get dragged back inland and if the strong upper trough feature comes off, it could get really interesting. (GFS has -16C at 500mb over Grafton compared to the -12C of MesoLAPS). GFS also has much stronger shear with 25-30knts at 700mb and 50-55knts at 500mb. THe GFS scenario reminds me a little of March 30, 2003 (see here...
http://www.australiasevereweather.com/storm_news/2003/docs/200303-01.htm ). For interests sake, if you load the recent 18z run of GFS and compare this to the charts at the bottom of the linked chase report from Michael Bath, you will see some distinct similarities. I'm not saying that its going to be anything like March 30, but it should at least give us something to look at. It has been a long long long time between "dry air aloft" storms here in SE QLD and NE NSW and I'll chase just about anything. Actually...i've just looked at it again and it looks very similar to March 30...hehe. But like I said, I'm not suggesting March 30 is going to happen.
On a side note, there were some nice storms off the coast of SE QLD and NE NSW last night. I managed to get some photos (will put them up over the weekend) of a storm which was off the coast of Yamba (near Grafton) from my balcony here in Brisbane. 230km away. Quite impressive really - I even managed one half decent clear air CG which struck way way out the back of the storm. A nice little reprieve from months and months of cloud, rain and relatively boring weather in what is supposed to be our storm season.
Macca