Model Diagnostic Discussion NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD 1210 AM EDT Sat Apr 27 2019 Valid Apr 27/0000 UTC thru Apr 30/1200 UTC ...See NOUS42 KWNO (ADMNFD) for the status of the upper air ingest... 00Z Model Evaluation...with Preferences and Confidence ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ...Overall Pattern Across the CONUS... ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Preference: General model blend (non-NAM northern Plains Sun/Mon; non-GFS/NAM southwest US Tue) Confidence: Slightly above average Fairly fast zonal northern stream flow will gradually transition to trough west, ridge east across the CONUS through the forecast period, setting the stage for an increasingly active weather pattern with several systems to watch. First, the deep shortwave trough over the Northeast US is expected to move off the coast with its associated precipitation exiting by the end of Saturday. Quick on its heels is a compact shortwave trough moving through the central/northern Plains into the Upper Midwest. A tight baroclinic zone with a surface low over Iowa will produce a swath of precipitation. In the last 12-24 hours, there has been a minor but consistent shift southward with the low track and thus precipitation axis, with the low now tracking through southern Iowa into central Illinois. This is seen in the latest NAM but also hi-res guidance. Another shortwave dives down through the Pacific Northwest on Sunday into Monday. This features is a bit stronger compared to the one moving through currently and is likely to close off at 500 mb over Montana. Model mass fields are fairly similar through 48 hours with the track/strength of the shortwave trough. At the surface, there are more differences, with the NAM being the furthest northwest while the ECMWF/GFS/UKMET are fairly similar with its position at 18z Sunday. A non-NAM blend is preferred here. Finally, a closed low off Baja California is expected to track across the southwest US early next week before opening up in the southwest flow over the central Plains. The typical fast bias in the GFS is seen here with the shortwave ejecting out into the central Plains 6-12 hours ahead of the other models, where is pretty good agreement seen in the ECMWF/UKMET/CMC. The NAM is fast as well, but not quite as much as the GFS. Here, a general model blend can be applied, which should slow down the faster GFS. Model trends at www.wpc.noaa.gov/html/model2.html 500 mb forecasts at www.wpc.noaa.gov/h5pref/h5pref.shtml Taylor