Model Diagnostic Discussion NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD 1035 AM EST Thu Dec 27 2018 Valid Dec 27/1200 UTC thru Dec 31/0000 UTC ...See NOUS42 KWNO (ADMNFD) for the status of the upper air ingest... 12z Model Evaluation...with Preferences and Confidence ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Preference: 00z ECMWF/ECENS, 06z GFS/GEFS, 12z NAM Confidence: Above average A closed low over the central Plains will lift northeast today followed by another shortwave trough digging into the southwest US tonight into Friday. Through the weekend, the longwave trough over the central US will remain in place taking on a positive tilt as the subtropical ridge over Florida and the Caribbean holds or builds further. For the Pacific Northwest, ridging initially will then be replaced by a shortwave trough approaching the area Saturday into Sunday. More amplification of the upper level pattern is expected by the end of the weekend as a ridge strengthens over the eastern Pacific. Through 60 hours, forecast guidance mass fields are in very good agreement and a general model blend will suffice. Beyond that, more differences develop across the Pacific Northwest with respect to the shortwave moving onshore Saturday/Saturday night. The GFS was a bit flatter compared to the ECMWF and CMC solutions, while the UKMET was more pronounced as the shortwave dug into the Northwest. At the surface and with QPF fields, the models actually show better agreement spatially and temporally. Across the central/eastern US, much of the differences lie with the QPF across the southeast US. The 06z GFS has its axis of heaviest rainfall extending northward into the mid-Atlantic region and is much higher compared to the ECMWF/CMC. It is worth noting that the GEFS mean is also showing higher amounts and is not too significantly different than its operational deterministic run. The CMC looks too fast with the line of showers/storms tracking east on Friday and also looks too light on amounts given the plume of moisture expected. The UKMET/ECMWF and to some degree the 12z NAM appear to be a good compromise (though the NAM might a tad too slow). By the end of the forecast period, another storm system is poised to bring back moisture into the mid-MS River Valley and TN Valley. There is a variety of QPF solutions, but the CMC appears the most of an outlier. All told, for the WPC blend, a blend of the 00z ECMWF/ECENS, 06z GFS/GEFS mean, and 12z NAM is preferred. Model trends at www.wpc.ncep.noaa.gov/html/model2.shtml 500 mb forecasts at www.wpc.ncep.noaa.gov/h5pref/h5pref.shtml Taylor